Palace on ICC withdrawal: Philippines can manage with its own laws | #AsiaNewsNetwork

Palace on ICC withdrawal: Philippines can manage with its own laws | #AsiaNewsNetwork
AFP file photo: Duterte has declared withdrawal from ICC.
AFP file photo: Duterte has declared withdrawal from ICC.
Published 18 March 2019
Christia Marie Ramos

MANILA, Philippines (Philippines Daily Inquirer) — Malacañang took a swipe at those criticizing the withdrawal of the Philippines from the International Criminal Court (ICC), saying that the jurisdictional crimes of that court were already covered under the Philippines’ own laws.

“Detractors of the President are quick to harp on the alleged injustices in the Philippines. They appear not to know or simply ignore the fact that the jurisdictional crimes of the ICC are already covered by our domestic laws,” presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo said in a statement issued on Sunday.

“Any individual who seeks redress for grievances on any kind of injustice is free to file a complaint with our courts using Philippine laws,” he added.

He also reiterated that the Philippines had never been a state party to the Rome Statute, the treaty that created the ICC.

“The President’s staunchest critics and vocal detractors are at it again lambasting the supposed withdrawal of the Philippines from the Rome Statute and necessarily from the jurisdiction of the [ICC],” Panelo said.

“The Philippines cannot leave that which has never joined in the first place,” he added. “The Philippines never became a State Party to the Rome Statute which created the ICC. As far as we are concerned, this tribunal is non-existent and its actions a futile exercise.”

The ICC launched a “preliminary examination” in February 2018 on the accusation that President Rodrigo Duterte had committed crimes against humanity, following a review of communications and reports documenting the alleged crimes linked to his brutal crackdown on illegal drugs.

A month after, the President declared the country’s withdrawal from the ICC.

In its letter to the ICC, the Philippines said its decision to withdraw was a “principled stand against those who politicize and weaponize human rights.”

https://globalnation.inquirer.net/173686/palace-on-icc-withdrawal-ph-can...