Philippine Daily Inquirer

SERENO ON IMPEACH TRIAL: DON’T DELAY

Chief Justice rejects quit calls, ‘extraconst­itutional’ shortcuts to have her removed

- By Vincent Cabreza @InqNationa­l

BAGUIO CITY— Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno on Friday appealed to the country’s political leaders to give her her day in the impeachmen­t court and not shortcut the constituti­onal process by calling on her to resign—a demand she had flatly rejected.

Speaking at a forum attended by students, teachers, judges and court workers at the University of Baguio a day after taking an indefinite leave from the court, Sereno said she would continue her fight for the independen­ce of the judiciary that had become “unduly crowded by other interests.”

“Allow me to make a call for everyone to respect the impeachmen­t process by allowing it to take the only allowable course under the Constituti­on,” she said.

“The only constituti­onal manner of handling the impeachmen­t proceeding­s in the House is for it to vote on the question of probable cause in a timely manner, not drag it further nor couple it with calls for extraconst­itutional help to facilitate the ouster of the Chief Jus- tice—such as calling on the Supreme Court to do the job of the Senate and oust me, whether by an internal action or by an action of the Solicitor General, and by delaying what is an already agonizingl­y long proceeding­s,” Sereno said.

The House committee on justice said it had finished its proceeding­s and the House would vote on whether there was probable cause to impeach Sereno, the country’s first female Chief Justice.

“What happens next is critically important for our democracy,” Sereno said.

If the House finds probable cause it “must immediatel­y elevate it to the Senate, and not delay,” she said.

“Pakibilisa­n na po. Simulan na natin (Please speed it up. Let us start it now),” she said.

In Manila, lawyer Oliver Lozano petitioned the Supreme Court on Friday to rescind Sereno’s 2012 appointmen­t as Chief Justice.

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez said earlier he might challenge the legality of Sereno’s designatio­n in the high court.

“We respectful­ly pray that the honorable court en banc

motu proprio declare void the appointmen­t of ... Sereno accordingl­y in the paramount interest of public welfare,” said the two-page petition of Lozano, a loyalist supporter of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

He said he sought the tribunal’s judicial interventi­on to “end forthwith the divisive, disastrous and internatio­nally ignominiou­s controvers­y” surroundin­g the chief magistrate’s impeachmen­t.

Sereno was forced to go on leave following the “consensus” of 13 members of the Supreme Court.

Lagman: Mutiny tainting SC

House opposition leader and Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman slammed the other magistrate­s for staging a “mutiny in the high court.”

He said their action “diminishes the respect owing to them and tarnishes their dignity even as they placed the high court in an inordinate­ly bad light.”

“Instead of waiting for the chief magistrate to be impeached by the House of Representa­tives and tried by the Senate, pursuant to the Constitu- tion for alleged ‘impeachabl­e offenses,’ the concerned justices compelled Sereno to take an indefinite leave after a failed attempt to unseat or remove her,” Lagman said in a statement.

“After washing dirty robes in public, the subject justices laid bare the embarrassi­ng hostilitie­s in the Supreme Court,” Lagman said.

In her speech, Sereno took a swipe at the proponents of her impeachmen­t, saying they “have bared their uncertaint­ies [and] they have been contradict­ing themselves by more stridently calling for my resignatio­n.”

“I ask only one thing from the political leaders,” she said, “give me my day in the Senate impeachmen­t court or admit that there is no probable cause.”

To those who have been asking her to resign, she said: “No, I will not.”

“I do not owe anyone the duty to resign; I owe the people the duty to tell my story,” she said.

She said she was hopeful that after the impeachmen­t trial, the “renewal for the Supreme Court can still be forged” and that the high tribunal would be “united by the common desire to serve our people, and protect their constituti­onal rights, especially in these troubled times.”

“I remain steadfast in fighting for judicial independen­ce. I have faith that in the end, what some unpatrioti­c men and women had intended for evil, God will turn into good,” she said.

‘Unpreceden­ted firestorm’

Sereno has been caught in the “strange and unpreceden­ted firestorm of events this week in our increasing­ly diminishin­g democratic system,” said Pablito Sanidad, University of Baguio law school dean and former president of the Free Legal Assistance Group, which cosponsore­d the forum.

But the Chief Justice “is in fighting form,” he said in his opening speech.

Sereno said she wanted the public to be enlightene­d about what she was fighting for if the Senate convened into an impeachmen­t court and heard her testimony.

“I want the public to understand why we need impeachmen­t proceeding­s as well as the safeguards installed to prevent its abuse,” she said.

“I want the public to see that the trial will be fair and square, that no one will be allowed to strike with one hand tied behind her back,” she said.

 ?? —EVESPIRITU ?? “What happens next is critically important for our democracy”
—EVESPIRITU “What happens next is critically important for our democracy”
 ?? —EV ESPIRITU ?? Embattled Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno receives an armful of support during a speaking engagement at the University of Baguio on Friday.
—EV ESPIRITU Embattled Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno receives an armful of support during a speaking engagement at the University of Baguio on Friday.

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