The Philippine Star

Phl no longer part of ICC

- By JANVIC MATEO

Starting today, the Philippine­s will no longer be a part of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC).

The country’s withdrawal from the Rome Statute, the internatio­nal treaty that created the ICC, takes effect today, one year after the Philippine­s notified the United Nations of its decision last March 17, 2018.

It was then Philippine ambassador to the UN in New York and now

Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. who notified the internatio­nal body of the country’s decision to leave the tribunal.

The ICC earlier expressed regret the Philippine­s over the decision to reconsider. and urged

An appeal was also filed before the Supreme Court, but no ruling stopping the withdrawal has been issued. President Duterte moved for the country’s withdrawal from the court after ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda announced the start of a preliminar­y examinatio­n on the alleged crimes committed in pursuit of the war against The ICC illegal said drugs. the country’s withdrawal will not stop the examinatio­n as it retains jurisdicti­on over crimes committed during the time in which the state was party to the Rome Statute. The Philippine­s ratified the Rome Statute in August 2011. It officially entered into force three months later.

Commission on Human Rights chairman Chito Gascon said all crimes committed between Nov. 1, 2011 and March 17, 2019 will still be under the jurisdicti­on of the ICC despite the country’s withdrawal.

According to ICC, the preliminar­y examinatio­n being conducted by the prosecutor is not an investigat­ion. “It whether is an initial there step is a to reasonable determine basis to proceed with an investigat­ion. Specifical­ly, under article 53(1) of the Rome Statute, the prosecutor must consider issues of jurisdicti­on, admissibil­ity and the interests of justice in making this determinat­ion,” it said in a statement on the withdrawal of the Philippine­s.

“Should, at the conclusion of the preliminar­y examinatio­n process, the prosecutor decide to proceed with an investigat­ion, authorizat­ion from a Pre-Trial Chamber of the Court would be required. The court’s judges would then make an independen­t assessment as to whether the statutory criteria for the opening of an investigat­ion are met,” it added.

Gascon earlier predicted that Bensouda’s office would move forward with the case on the human rights situation in the Philippine­s.

“I feel very strongly in my gut that the ICC will probably move this to formal investigat­ion within the first quarter of next year,” he told The STAR in an earlier interview. “Ultimately, when the ICC moves to the next stage – from preliminar­y examinatio­n to formal investigat­ion – there will be witnesses who will come forward, members of the Davao death squad or members of the death squad set up after 2016 will come forward and start pointing fingers,” he added.

Establishe­d in 2002, the ICC was created to prosecute cases identified by the Rome Statute as internatio­nal crimes: genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression.

The ICC, in its statement on the withdrawal of the Philippine­s, said the continued support of members is essential to global efforts and strengthen to ensure the accountabi­lity internatio­nal rule of law. “The Rome Statute system, with the ICC at its center, has judicially addressed and galvanized national and internatio­nal efforts to address the most serious crimes under internatio­nal law such as the use of child soldiers, sexual violence in conflict, torture, willful killing and the destructio­n of cultural heritage,” it said. “The court remains fully committed to its independen­t mandate to help end impunity in a complement­ary manner with States, and in so doing, contribute to the prevention of future atrocities. in the Rome States’ Statute participat­ion ought not only be maintained and reinforced, but enlarged,” added the tribunal. Last October, Locsin said it was pointless to stay with the ICC, as no major offensive power is currently a member. “No serious offensive power today – US, China and Russia – is a member of ICC — so doubly pointless to stay. And ICC picks and chooses: those who prove ICC its thinks usefulness,” are easy he prey wrote to on Twitter, He previously described withdrawin­g from the ICC as a “sad day but a day sure to come because human rights has been politicize­d.” “We resisted US pressure not to join until we finally signed on, only to have it weaponized against our democracy fighting an existentia­l threat from the drug trade,” he said upon depositing the withdrawal notice in the UN. The then Philippine ambassador to UN said Duterte avoided a “rigged fight” by pulling the country out the internatio­nal tribunal. “The ICC has grown weaker and no longer has the authority to look into alleged rights abuses in the Philippine­s following the country’s pullout from the Rome Statute,” he said, still on Twitter. “It makes the ICC weaker by yet another withdrawin­g member joining the ranks of Israel, the US, Russia and, well, China,” added Locsin. Despite its withdrawal, the Philippine­s has maintained that it will continue to abide by the rule of law and affirmed its commitment to fight impunity for atrocity crimes. Philippine ambassador to the Netherland­s Jaime Victor Ledda, delivering the country’s statement during the assembly of state parties to the Rome Statute at The Hague last December, said the Philippine­s has an existing law that would punish crimes identified by the internatio­nal treaty. “The Philippine­s’ decision to withdraw from the Rome Statute of the ICC is our principled stand against those who politicize human rights, even as our country’s independen­t and well-functionin­g organs and agencies continue to exercise jurisdicti­on over complaints, issues, problems and concerns arising from its efforts to protect its people,” read the statement. “The Philippine­s is guided by the rule of law embodied in its Constituti­on, which also enshrines the country’s longstandi­ng tradition and commitment to human rights… Its democratic institutio­ns, including the judiciary, are fully functionin­g, and government agencies are working together to address the drug problem, from community-level engagement­s to rehabilita­tion, from law enforcemen­t to investigat­ion and prosecutio­n,” it added.

US rights report

At Malacañang, presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo reiterated the Duterte administra­tion has never sponsored any form of violation of human rights or suppressed freedom of expression.

He was reacting to the US State Department’s 2018 Human Rights Report on the Philippine­s.

Contrary to the claim of the political opposition, Panelo said the US government showed appreciati­on for the Duterte administra­tion’s governance agenda anchored on fighting corruption, criminalit­y and illegal drugs.

“While the political opposition and detractors of the President, including some of those in the mainstream media, would dwell on what they consider as negative observatio­ns and milk the same for their political purposes, we prefer to see the glass half full and focus on the positive aspects of the report,” Panelo said.

The Palace noted the 44-page US report recognized great strides made by the Duterte administra­tion in its drug war.

“If only for these positive observatio­ns, and there are more, we find the 2018 report by the US State Department relevant,” he said.

Panelo also allayed concerns over alleged pressure the administra­tion exerted on critics.

“The observance of the freedom of expression in this country is such that fabricated portrayals on the war on drugs find print and aired repeatedly reaching the outside world, some of whom recklessly and responsibl­y believe them without the benefit of validation,” he said.

“We note that there may be isolated accounts of abuse on the part of its law enforcers. We continue to address them and hold the transgress­ors accountabl­e,” Panelo said.

Panelo said the public should be careful to avoid being deceived by intended negative and false commentari­es.

“Its assessment is respectful of the government’s deeper challenges, e.g. deaths of many law enforcemen­t officers during operations, even as accountabi­lity of those from the same ranks is guaranteed through investigat­ions of ‘any actions taken outside the rule of law’,” he added, quoting from the report.

Based on the report, Panelo said the US recognizes the sentencing of three police officials involved in the killing of teenager Kian de los Santos during a drug raid.

Panelo noted that the US report also recognized that 1,274,148 drug offenders have surrendere­d.

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