Tag: Rodrigo Duterte

  • ICC Charges Rodrigo Duterte With Crimes Against Humanity

    ICC Charges Rodrigo Duterte With Crimes Against Humanity

    Former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte has been charged with crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court (ICC).

    The 80-year-old is accused of being criminally responsible for dozens of murders that allegedly took place as part of his so-called war on drugs, during which thousands of small-time drug dealers, users and others were killed without trial.

    The ICC’s charge sheet, which includes several redactions, dates from July but was only made public on Monday.

    ICC deputy prosecutor Mame Mandiaye Niang said Duterte was an “indirect co-perpetrator” in the killings, which the court alleges were carried out by others, including police.

    The first count laid against Mr Duterte concerns his alleged involvement in the killings of 19 people in Davao City between 2013 and 2016 while he was mayor there.

    The other two charges relate to times when he was serving as president of the Philippines, between 2016 and 2022, and launched his so-called war on drugs.

    The second count relates to the murders of 14 “high-value targets” across the country, while the third relates to the murder and attempted murder of 45 people in village clearance operations.

    Prosecutors referred to how Mr Duterte and his alleged co-perpetrators “shared a common plan or agreement to ‘neutralise’ alleged criminals in the Philippines (including those perceived or alleged to be associated with drug use, sale or production) through violent crimes including murder”.

    He has offered no apologies for his brutal anti-drugs crackdown, which saw more than 6,000 people killed – although activists believe the real figure could run into the tens of thousands.

    Mr Duterte said he cracked down on drug dealers to rid the country of street crimes.

    Rodrigo Duterte is the first Asian former head of state to be indicted by the ICC – and the first suspect to be flown to The Hague in Netherlands – where the court is based – in over three years. He has been in custody there since March.

    His lawyer has said Mr Duterte is not able to stand trial due to poor health.

    In May, the former president was again elected mayor of Davao, despite being in prison. His son Sebastian (who had been serving as mayor since 2022), has continued as acting mayor in his father’s stead.

    Mr Duterte’s supporters alleged the ICC was being used as a political tool by the country’s current president Ferdinand Marcos, who had publicly fallen out with the powerful Duterte family.

    The ICC effectively has no power to arrest people without the co-operation of the countries they are in, which is most often refused – and Marcos had previously dismissed the idea of co-operating with the ICC.

    (BBC)

  • Former Philippine President Duterte Says He Takes Full Responsibility For ‘War on Drugs’

    Former Philippine President Duterte Says He Takes Full Responsibility For ‘War on Drugs’

    Former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said he takes full responsibility for his “war on drugs” as he braces for a legal battle at the International Criminal Court (ICC) over alleged crimes against humanity.

    In a video message posted on his Facebook account, and viewed 10 million times, Duterte said it will be a “long” legal battle at the ICC, which took him into custody as his charter flight landed at Rotterdam The Hague airport on Wednesday evening.

    He was transferred to a detention unit on the Dutch coast.

    The ICC, in a statement, said it found “reasonable grounds to believe that Duterte “is individually responsible as an indirect co-perpetrator for the crime against humanity of murder,” allegedly committed in the Philippines between November 2011 and March 2019.

    Duterte’s “war on drugs” is said to have killed thousands of small-time drug dealers, users and others without trial.

    The video that appeared to have been recorded inside the plane showed only Duterte speaking while wearing a plain white shirt.

    Duterte was put on a chartered flight to The Hague on Tuesday to face trial after he was arrested at Manila International Airport upon his arrival from Hong Kong.

    The plane made a stopover in Dubai before it continued to The Hague.

    “Whatever happened in the past, I will be the front of our law enforcement and the military. I said this already, that I will protect you, and I will be responsible for everything,” the 79-year old former Philippine leader said in the over two-minute video.

    “This will be a long legal proceeding, but I say to you, I will continue to serve my country. And so be it, if that is my destiny,” he added.

    He assured his supporters he is well.

    “I am okay, do not worry,” the 79-year-old former Philippine leader said.

    Duterte, who led the Philippines from 2016 to 2022, could become the first Asian former head of state to go on trial at the ICC.

    His daughter, Sara Duterte, the Philippine vice president, also arrived in The Hague on Wednesday to help arrange a legal team for her father.

  • Former Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte Arrested on ICC Warrant For Crimes Against Humanity

    Former Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte Arrested on ICC Warrant For Crimes Against Humanity

    Former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte was arrested by police at Manila’s international airport Tuesday on order of the International Criminal Court in connection with a case of crime against humanity filed against him, the Philippine government said.

    Duterte was arrested after arriving from Hong Kong and police took him into custody on orders of the ICC, which has been investigating the massive killings that happened under the former president’s deadly crackdown against illegal drugs. President Ferdinand Marcos’ office said in a statement.

    The ICC launched an investigation into drug killings under Duterte from Nov. 1, 2011, when he was still mayor of the southern city of Davao, to March 16, 2019, as possible crimes against humanity. Duterte withdrew the Philippines in 2019 from the Rome Statute in a move human rights activists say was aimed at escaping accountability over the killings.

    The Duterte administration moved to suspend the global court’s investigation in late 2021 by arguing that Philippine authorities were already looking into the same allegations, arguing the ICC — a court of last resort — didn’t have jurisdiction.

    Appeals judges at the ICC ruled in July 2023 the investigation could resume and rejected the Duterte administration’s objections. Based in The Hague, the Netherlands, the ICC can step in when countries are unwilling or unable to prosecute suspects in the most heinous international crimes, including genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., who succeeded Duterte in 2022 and became entangled in a bitter political dispute with the former president, has decided not to rejoin the global court. But the Marcos administration has said it would cooperate if the ICC asks international police to take Duterte into custody through a so-called Red Notice, a request for law enforcement agencies worldwide to locate and temporarily arrest a crime suspect.

    (AP)