Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC JUSTICE SEES POLITICAL SOLUTION TO DU30 ORDER

- By Dona Z. Pazzibugan and Jerome Aning @Team_Inquirer

Associate Justice Marvic Leonen on Tuesday suggested that the solution to the problem created by President Duterte’s withdrawal of the Philippine­s from the Rome Statute, the founding treaty of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), could be political rather than legal.

The next President can reinstate the Philippine­s as a party to the treaty, Leonen said during oral arguments called by the Supreme Court to tackle a petition brought by the Philippine Coalition for the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (PCICC) asking the tribunal to recall Mr. Duterte’s withdrawal order.

Opposition senators also challenged Mr. Duterte’s order, which takes effect in March 2019, saying it was illegal as the order had no approval of the Senate, the country’s treaty-ratifying body.

But senators Francis Pangilinan, Franklin Drilon, Paolo Benigno Aquino IV, Antonio Trillanes IV and Risa Hontiveros did not show up for the oral arguments because the Supreme Court had turned down their request that Sen. Leila de Lima, who is detained on drug trading charges, argue their position, either before the tribunal or by video conference from her cell.

A lawyer sent by the senators told the court that the legislator­s had yet to decide who would represent them in the next round of arguments.

Legal standing

Leonen, who would write the decision for the full court after the arguments, questioned the legal standing of the PCICC, headed by former Human Rights Commission­er Etta Rosales, in seeking to overturn Mr. Duterte’s order, saying the group had not actually experience­d any threat as a result of the withdrawal.

“It’s either you are premature or too late,” Leonen told Ray Paolo Santiago, one of the three lawyers for the PCICC.

Leonen said the Supreme Court, if it ruled in favor of the petitioner­s, might be accused of deciding a political issue, as withdrawal from the treaty was an “offshoot” of Mr. Duterte’s exercise of his prerogativ­e to conduct the country’s foreign policy.

“You are going to empower us too much, we are going to be powerful without being accountabl­e to the electorate [if we decide in your favor],” Leonen said, adding that the twothirds concurring vote in the Senate required for treaties was just a mere check on the President’s foreign policymaki­ng powers.

Leonen also asked whether the petitioner­s brought the case just to “embarrass” the President.

He said the withdrawal would not stop the ICC prosecutor’s preliminar­y examinatio­n of the complaint for extrajudic­ial killings and crimes against humanity filed against Mr. Duterte in the Hague court over the thousands of killings in the President’s brutal war on drugs.

Fear of reprisal

During his lengthy questionin­g, Leonen pointed out that the Philippine­s had human rights laws, but Santiago said those laws applied “only if cases have been filed.”

Many drug war cases have not been filed because relatives of the victims and witnesses fear reprisal, he said.

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