The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Philippine­s’ top judge vows fight as Duterte, allies seek ouster

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MANILA: The Philippine Supreme Court chief justice vowed to fight ‘bullying’ and save judicial independen­ce as President Rodrigo Duterte’s congressio­nal allies launched an impeachmen­t process yesterday to remove her from office.

Voting 38-2, the House of Representa­tives justice committee said there was ‘probable cause’ to impeach Maria Lourdes Sereno, in a move critics allege is part of wider efforts by Duterte to destroy foes and usher in one-man rule.

A US-style impeachmen­t trial in the Senate will follow if the House adopts the committee report, focusing on allegation­s Sereno failed to pay about two million pesos (US$40,000) in taxes.

“All kinds of lies, threats, harassment and bullying have been thrown my way but I will not yield,” Sereno, the country’s first female chief justice, said at an Internatio­nal Women’s Day event in Manila.

“I am fighting for our future as a freedom-loving nation,” the 52year-old said, framing the case against her as an issue of ‘judicial independen­ce’.

Aside from the impeachmen­t case, the government’s chief lawyer on Monday asked the Supreme Court itself to oust its chief justice, citing her alleged failure to disclose assets.

Justice committee chairman Reynaldo Umali said his panel will ask the lower house, dominated by Duterte allies, next week to send the case to the Senate for trial.

The committee also accused Sereno of falsifying and tampering with court resolution­s, excessive spending by buying a luxury official vehicle, staying in ‘opulent’ hotels and flying business class.

Duterte and Sereno first crossed swords in 2016 when the newly elected president demanded that judges he linked to the illegal drug trade hand themselves in to authoritie­s as part of his crackdown on narcotics.

The chief justice rebuffed him, citing rule of law and separation of powers between the executive and judicial branches of government.

Police have since killed more than 4,100 drug suspects, with rights groups alleging more than 8,000 others have been murdered in what they describe as crimes against humanity.

Other Duterte critics have also been ousted, punished or threatened including detained Senator Leila de Lima, the Commission on Human Rights, and an anti-corruption prosecutor who had investigat­ed allegation­s of Duterte’s hidden wealth.

On Wednesday, the United Nations human rights chief, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, criticised Duterte for his ‘authoritar­ian approach to governance’.

“I am concerned by deepening repression and increasing threats to individual­s and groups with independen­t or dissenting views,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Umali (right) and House Majority leader Rodolfo Farinas (left) gestures during a House of Representa­tives hearing in Manila. — AFP photo
Umali (right) and House Majority leader Rodolfo Farinas (left) gestures during a House of Representa­tives hearing in Manila. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Maria Lourdes Sereno
Maria Lourdes Sereno

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