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Rally to celebrate the ICC’s decision to resume its investigation into crimes committed in the Philippines under President Duterte, Quezon City, July 2023.

Picture by: Basilio Sepe | ZUMA Press | Alamy Stock Photo

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Ex-president Duterte under scrutiny for Philippine war on drugs

15-year-old Samantha De Mesa reports on the inquiry into human rights violations in the Philippines

During the tenure of former president Rodrigo R. Duterte from 2016 to 2022, the Philippines conducted a brutal anti-narcotics campaign, in which thousands of people died.

Unjustified extrajudicial killings throughout Duterte’s term in office led an initial probe into the ‘war on drugs’ by the government’s House Quad committee, prompting the Senate to open its own investigation.

The war on drugs conducted under Durterte’s rule terrorised the country. However, the number of casualties is uncertain, with figures from several reliable resources varying greatly. Human Rights Watch claim that the government’s actions resulted in the death of 12,000 Filipinos. Multiple other sources said the numbers are closer to 6,000.

However, a 2023 study by one of the country’s most renowned universities, the University of the Philippines-Diliman, claimed deaths may top 30,000. Recorded deaths include the killings of 122 minors, among them a one-year-old.

Chair of the Senate justice committee Aquilino ‘Koko’ Pimentel III opened the inquiry on 28 October 2024, on behalf of the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee, which investigates cases involving government officials and matters of public interest.

“I want to start our investigation by examining first the Duterte administration’s enforcement of our anti-illegal drugs laws. How effective was the Duterte war on drugs? Did it follow the laws and rules? Was it compliant with the letter of the Constitution, as well as with the values and principles contained in our Constitution?” Pimentel asked.

Duterte appeared at the hearing as a “resource person” because of his knowledge about the Philippines drug war. He admitted he oversaw a death squad during his 20 years as mayor of Davao city in the south of the country. His landslide victory as president in 2016 was partly down to his promise to replicate that anti-crime campaign nationally.

The ex-president said he ordered police officers to provoke suspects to fight back to justify their killings, formerly known as ‘shoot-to-kill’ orders.

Ang sinabi ko, ganito: ‘Encourage the criminals to fight. Encourage them to draw their guns.’ Kapag lumaban, patayin ninyo para matapos na ang problema ko sa siyudad ko,” 1 Duterte testified.

Duterte also testified that the serving Philippine senator Ronald ‘Bato’ Dela Rosa was a member of the aforementioned drug squad. When asked for a clarification, Duterte retracted his statement.

Family members of drug war victims Kian De Los Santos and Jose Gonzalez were present for the inaugural hearing. Former senator Leila de Lima, a Duterte critic who was jailed for seven years on a drug-dealing charge that was eventually dropped, was also present. Chel Diokno, and former presidential spokesperson Atty. Salvador Panelo, also attended the hearing.

 

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  • President Duterte with a chart of a high-level drug network in the Philippines, 2016.

    Picture by: Wikipedia

  • After the opening day of the hearing on 28 October, this is what occurred:

    The Philippine Drug War is also being investigated by the International Criminal Court (ICC). Should the ICC issue a ‘red notice’ (an order to arrest and detain a named individual) on Duterte, the Philippines is obliged to comply.

    Written by:

    author_bio

    Samantha De Mesa

    The Harbinger Prize 2024 (International Affairs)

    Contributor

    Cavite, Philippines

    Born in 2009 in Cavite, Philippines, Samantha now studies in Manila. She is interested in literary and performance arts and plans to study medical anthropology. She joined the magazine having won the International affairs category of the Harbinger prize 2024

    In her free time, Samantha enjoys writing proses and poetries. She won Notable Submission Award in 2021 Bow Seat Ocean Awareness Contest Poetry & Spoken Word Junior Category and is one of the runner-ups in the 2022 Immerse Education Essay Competition.

    Samantha speaks Filipino and English.

    Edited by:

    author_bio

    Emily Dorman

    International Affairs Section Editor 2024

    Florida, United States

    human rights

    Footnotes

    1.

    “What I said is this: ‘Encourage the criminals to fight. Encourage them to draw their guns.’ If they do, kill them so that my problem in my city will finally end.”

    1

    “What I said is this: ‘Encourage the criminals to fight. Encourage them to draw their guns.’ If they do, kill them so that my problem in my city will finally end.”

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