The Manila Times

ICC should stand down, give way to local courts

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LOVE him or hate him, former president Rodrigo Duterte should not be investigat­ed by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) for the alleged extrajudic­ial killings during his term. If at all, the case should be handled by Philippine courts, which, as mentioned in a previous editorial, are already hearing 52 cases involving 154 police officers charged with crimes related to the previous administra­tion’s war on illegal drugs. Two have already been convicted.

Still, the ICC decided last month to resume its investigat­ion of alleged “crimes against humanity” perpetrate­d under the previous administra­tion. If that pushes through, it will struggle to be impartial. The ICC statements already sound partisan, not to mention inaccurate. For instance, its website says the “ICC’s action is an important step toward accountabi­lity for the ‘drug war’ killings in the Philippine­s, which continue to occur on a daily basis and where activists and journalist­s face threats, harassment and even death for speaking out.”

If only the ICC visits the local news websites, it will see no shortage of people speaking out against the government and former presidents on a variety of issues, including Mr. Duterte’s campaign against illicit drugs.

This country is not perfect, but those faults are not the responsibi­lity of any foreign entity, especially one with a biased perspectiv­e of the local situation.

Obviously, the ICC does not grasp the severity of the drug menace in the Philippine­s. Before Mr. Duterte was elected president in 2016, drug syndicates were out of control. Nine of 10 villages, or barangay, across the country had been infiltrate­d by those criminal organizati­ons, many of which were based abroad and operating in several countries.

Even after a brutal campaign, the previous government failed to dismantle all those syndicates. But to its credit, the incidence of drug-related crimes went down.

Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert Ace Barbers said in a statement that Mr. Duterte’s campaign kept the Philippine­s from becoming a “narco state.” He added that, as “chairman of the House Committee on Dangerous Drugs during the whole Duterte administra­tion, I have seen the gravity of the drug problem firsthand. My position gave me privileged access to all informatio­n on the real situation.”

He is one of the 18 lawmakers supporting House Resolution 780, which was filed last week by Deputy House Speaker Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, herself a former president. The resolution supported the position of the incumbent government, underscori­ng the argument that the Philippine­s has a functionin­g and independen­t judicial system.

Earlier, Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin “Boying” Remulla said the ICC can rightfully conduct proceeding­s only in states without a functionin­g government and justice system. Clearly, that is not the situation in the Philippine­s.

And contrary to the ICC statement that Filipinos are too scared to speak up, some have been vocal against Mr. Duterte and the recently filed House resolution. One is Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman, who said the alleged offenses of Mr. Duterte cannot be cleansed by the House laundromat. Mr. Lagman also argued that the Philippine judicial system was in “default” in favor of the former president. But that statement is not supported by facts. As mentioned earlier, there are several cases filed in court.

Wrong target

Meanwhile, where are the people investigat­ing the criminals involved in the illegal drug trade? Surely, the ICC does not believe that they are defenseles­s and harmless.

What about the lives they have destroyed, or the economic costs that resulted from the lost labor productivi­ty of drug users? What about justice for the victims killed by the syndicates in support of their billion-dollar empire?

People abroad may not realize that the most popular drug in the Philippine­s is “shabu,” the street name for methamphet­amine hydrochlor­ide. Shabu is nothing like the recreation­al drugs that some say should be legalized.

If anyone deserves to be investigat­ed, it should be the drug cartels and their pushers. They are probably laughing at the ICC for going after their nemesis, Mr. Duterte. Hopefully, the ICC probe will not discourage the current and future government­s from going after those criminals.

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