New Era

Duterte will not cooperate with ICC

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MANILA - Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte will “never cooperate” with an Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) probe into the country’s deadly drug war, his spokesman said yesterday, branding the process “legally erroneous”.

Outgoing ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda on Monday asked judges at the world’s only permanent war crimes court to authorise an investigat­ion into allegation­s that Philippine police unlawfully killed as many as tens of thousands of civilians between 2016 and 2019.

Duterte was elected in 2016 on a campaign promise to get rid of the country’s drug problem, and he openly ordered police to kill drug suspects if their lives were in danger.

“The president will never cooperate until the end of his term on 30 June 2022,” Harry Roque told reporters, repeating a previous assertion that the ICC has no jurisdicti­on in the Philippine­s because it pulled out of the tribunal.

The Philippine­s left the ICC in 2019 after the court launched a preliminar­y examinatio­n into the war on drugs.

Bensouda said it could still investigat­e crimes committed while the country was a member.

“The available informatio­n indicates that members of the Philippine National Police, and others acting in concert with them, have unlawfully killed between several thousand and tens of thousands of civilians” during the period under investigat­ion, said Bensouda, in one of her last acts before stepping down this week.

But Roque rejected her findings and said it was “an insult to all Filipinos” to suggest the country’s justice system was not working.

“We will be compared to countries like Darfur, areas where there is no functionin­g government. It’s not right,” he said.

“If killings occurred, appropriat­e force and violence were observed.”

The crackdown is Duterte’s signature policy initiative and he defends it fiercely, especially from critics such as Western leaders and institutio­ns, which he says, do not care about the Philippine­s.

More than 6 000 people have been killed in over 200 000 anti-drug operations conducted since July 2016, according to official data.

Human rights groups estimate the number of dead could be several times higher.

Many suspects have been put on “drug watch lists” by local officials and then visited by police at their homes - a situation which often ends in a deadly shooting that officers claim was self-defence.

Rights groups welcomed Bensouda’s request, with Amnesty Internatio­nal describing the ICC investigat­ion as a “landmark step”.

 ?? Photo: Arab News ?? Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte.
Photo: Arab News Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte.

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