Philippine lawmakers urged to push for ICC probe into drug war

Philippine lawmakers urged to push for ICC probe into drug war
On November 20, Floral tributes were paid to the victims of the 2009 Ampatuan Massacre in Mindanao. Photo: UCAN/National Union of Journalists of the Philippines

MANILA (UCAN): Rights organisations called on Philippine lawmakers to support pending resolutions in Congress that urge the country’s presidend, Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., to cooperate with the International Criminal Court [ICC] probe into killings linked to the anti-drug war of his predecessor, Rodrigo Duterte.

The investigation by the court’s prosecutor also includes Duterte’s time as mayor of Davao City in Mindanao.

“The government’s re-commitment to the Rome statute and the ICC is long overdue. This should happen now,” Cristina Palabay, the secretary general of human rights alliance, Karapatan, said on November 24.

“At the same time, accountability should be sought not only for the crimes against humanity of Duterte and others. There needs to be accountability for the past and present administration,” Palabay said.

Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director, Bryony Lau, lauded the Filipino lawmakers urging the Marcos administration to cooperate with the ICC for “taking a firm and principled stand for accountability.”

The government’s re-commitment to the Rome statute and the ICC is long overdue. This should happen now

Cristina Palabay

In a statement on November 24, Lau said, “More lawmakers should support the House resolution. The Marcos government should do right by the victims of the ‘war on drugs’ and the ‘Davao Death Squad’ and assist the ICC investigation into alleged crimes against humanity.” 

Congressional Human Rights Committee chairperson, Bienvenido Abante, also filed Resolution No. 1477 for a similar purpose.

“Given the failure of domestic redress mechanisms, the ongoing ICC investigation provides a glimpse of hope to victims of the anti-drug war and their families in their quest for justice and accountability,” she added.

Redemptorist Father Amado Picardal, a vocal critic of Duterte’s violent crackdown on drugs, maintained that the lawmakers’ move “is a welcome development and in line with the 2021 Supreme Court Ruling that the Philippines is under obligation to cooperate in the ICC investigation.”

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Father Picardal, who helped document the anti-drug war killings in Davao, said, “If this resolution passes and if President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. allows the ICC to come in, this will be a good sign that the government is serious in holding accountable those responsible for mass murder and crimes against humanity.” 

At a press conference in Manila on November 24, Marcos told reporters that there are serious issues to be considered before the resolution can be debated for further deliberations.

 “Because if you’re talking about the sovereign jurisdiction of the ICC, especially since we have withdrawn from the Rome statute a few years back, that brings into question, whether or not this is actually possible,” he claimed, adding, “There is also a question: Should we return under the fold of the ICC? So, that’s again under study. So, we’ll just keep looking at it and see what our options are.” 

Vice president, Sara Duterte, the daughter of the former president, claimed that allowing an ICC probe into alleged crimes that are under the legal process of the country “is not only patently unconstitutional but effectively belittles and degrades our legal institutions.” 

Former president, Duterte, withdrew the Philippines from the ICC’s Rome statute in March 2019, effectively bars the international court from having any jurisdiction over the country.

However, the ICC investigators said that since the crimes were committed when the country was still a member, the court can exercise its jurisdiction and prosecute Duterte.  

Human rights groups say over 20,000 people were killed during Duterte’s drug war which started in 2016.

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