Author's Notes: Since late last year, I have been working on a book project. The tentative title of my book is "KILL, KILL, KILL Extrajudicial Killings Under Duterte Government; Crimes Against Humanity vs. Duterte et. al. at ICC." It's a tedious undertaking because of many details that have to be documented. I am more than halfway. But more details have been unearthed and included in the book. This is the first of three parts of the first chapter (It has about 8 or 9 chapters). This is part of the documentation of the bloody but failed war on drugs by Rodrigo Duterte.
Chapter 1 WAR ON DRUGS
“The conscience of humanity is the foundation of all law.” - Benjamin Berell Ferencz
“The game of history is usually played by the best and the worst over the heads of the majority in the middle.”― Eric Hoffer in “The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements”
POPULIST Rodrigo Duterte sounded as if he had a mission. In his political sorties nationwide before the May 9, 2016 presidential elections, Duterte promised that, if elected, he would launch a brutal and bloody war against illegal drugs.1 Duterte said he would not hesitate to kill people engaged in drug trade - users, pushers and drug lords alike. Duterte was no different from the demagogues of yesteryears, as he promised unequivocally to end drug trafficking and criminality in three to six months. His statement of hope resonated in most parts of the country. Voters took him as a man of destiny, who was to save the Philippines from the drug menace and perdition and usher the anticipated tranquility and progress in the country. They elected him president with a plurality of over 16 million votes and a margin of more than five million votes over his nearest rival.2
Duterte told multitudes in various cities that he would deal directly with two issues: drug addiction and drug dealing. There was no in-between. It was the message that defined the centerpiece of his political platform and program of government. His war on drugs hinges on the murder of drug users, pushers, and traders, big and small. He delivered with urgency his campaign promise, which was to kill these people at all cost - without mercy and moral compunction. This was unprecedented in Philippine history. No candidate has made murder a part of his political platform and program of government. Despite their faults and collective inadequacies, too numerous to mention, Filipino politicians, as part of their political culture, usually promise to deliver the moon, or bring heaven on earth. Politicians are the prophets of boom and bloom, not doom and gloom. Duterte is a political rascal, an unmitigated fluke, an unrepentant counter-flow to history. His populism is the proverbial bump on the road of democracy.
The campaign promise to launch a bloody war against drug trade, no matter how captivating for people with limited mind, was not only inherently wrong by whichever law or cultural yardstick. It was largely based on plain ignorance. Despite his experience as a lawyer, state prosecutor, and mayor of Davao City, Duterte did not know and understand that an international criminal justice system has been evolving over the years. Its processes and tenets have kept on improving over the last 50 years. International criminal law has emerged as a specialized part of the international law. Gone were the days when a tyrant unilaterally kills his people with impunity. The international criminal justice system is put in place to check the abuses of power against the people. In brief, Duterte, although admittedly limited and parochial in his views and perceptions, did not have an iota of knowledge and understanding that he was bound to face complaints and imprisonment if he would fulfill his campaign promise.
WAR AGAINST THE POOR. Duterte’s election as president and ascendancy to power in 2016 is a tragedy of historic and global significance and implications. Duterte is the blind leader elected by the equally blind Filipino people to lead them. After he has taken over, Duterte unleashed the unusual ferocity to kill his own people with impunity and took steps to undermine and weaken the Philippine legal system to bring criminals within the ambit of criminal justice system. His war against drug is nothing but a war against the poor and downtrodden.3 Most of the people whom he ordered killed came from depressed urban communities. They were helpless and powerless, as they did not have the capacity to fight back. His order to kill them did not undergo the legal processes enshrined in the Philippine Constitution and existing laws. They were not given the chance to defend themselves, reform, and return as useful citizens to society.
Duterte’s bloody antidrug war was alleged to have triggered the death of between 16,000 to 30,000 people from 2016 to 2019, which was the year of withdrawal by the Philippines from the Rome Statute, the multilateral treaty that has created the International Criminal Court (ICC) . No less than Fatou Bensouda, the now retired ICC Chief Prosecutor, made the estimates on the basis of the preliminary investigation that she led on the drug-related extrajudicial killings (EJKs) under the Duterte government. Bensouda, who was the ICC chief prosecutor when Duterte became president, recommended the official investigation by ICC of the charges of crimes against humanity, which the camp of a pair of intrepid lawmakers, Antonio Trillanes IV and Gary Alejano, has built up, filed with, and brought in 2017 to the ICC. It was Trillanes and Alejano, who brought the first crimes against humanity charges against Duterte and his cohorts before the ICC. When it was not fashionable to bring any president, prime minister, and chief executive before an international forum, the pair of lawmakers did what could be regarded the unthinkable and unprecedented.
At that time, no one had the audacity to file the charges against Duterte and his ilk before the ICC or any other international forum. Duterte and his ilk were at the height of their political power, viewing his electoral mandate as sort of a license to kill people. Political leaders, even the ones in the democratic political opposition, kept silent for fear of reprisal from Duterte and his minions. They did not have the courage, drive, and initiative to go against the flow. They chose the path of least resistance, hoping the issue would solve by itself. But Trillanes and Alejano persisted and ignored the threats of retaliation, as Duterte brandished his supposed mandate to kill the people allegedly involved in illegal drug trade.4
COMPLEX FIELD. Incidentally, international criminal law is a field of international law that seeks to regulate the behavior of states, organizations, political leaders, and individuals operating across national boundaries in the commission of international crimes. It deals with securing suspects, witnesses and evidence from other countries to prosecute a crime. International criminal law is a complex field, as it undergoes frequent and continuous changes. Mired in his parochialism and limited viewpoint, Duterte and his ilk did not know that they would fall entrapped in this relatively new branch of international law and would have to pay dearly for their sins against the Filipino people whom they have sworn to serve and defend under the 1987 Constitution.
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STATE-SPONSORED CAMPAIGN
EVEN at the start of his presidency, Rodrigo Duterte was bent to pursue the war on drugs. In his June 30, 2016 inaugural address, which he immediately delivered after he was sworn into office, Duterte could not help but deliver conflicting statements. He proclaimed that as a lawyer and former state prosecutor, he knew the extent of the presidential power and authority and that he knew what was legal and right. It was a statement that was met by thunderous applause. It was a statement that was later used against him by the international community of uncompromising human rights advocates. He said:
“My adherence to due process and the rule of law is uncompromising.”
In the early part of his inaugural address, he indicated that he would pursue a bloody war on drugs, using illegal means, which might include extrajudicial killings, or summary executions devoid of the legal processes. Little did the world know he would resort to the combined use of the Philippine National Police (PNP) as an institution and unnamed vigilante groups in his war on illegal drugs. Duterte had the gall to warn the Commission on Human Rights (CHR), the constitutional body tasked to protect every citizen from every conceivable human rights abuse and ensure the compliance of the Philippines on international pacts on human rights, asking it to get out of his way in his pursuit of the war on drugs. It was a statement that directly contradicted his purported adherence to the rule of law and its flipside – due processes. Sounding defensive but impetuous and imperious, by all means, Duterte declared:
“There are those who do not approve of my methods of fighting criminality, the sale and use of illegal drugs and corruption. They say that my methods are unorthodox and verge on the illegal. In response, let me say this: I have seen how corruption bled the government of funds, which were allocated for the use in uplifting the poor from the mire that they are in. I have seen how illegal drugs destroyed individuals and ruined family relationships. I have seen how criminality, by means all foul, snatched from the innocent and the unsuspecting, the years and years of accumulated savings. Years of toil and then, suddenly, they are back to where they started. Look at this from that perspective and tell me that I am wrong.”
The coup de grace:
“In this fight, I ask Congress and the Commission on Human Rights and all others who are similarly situated to allow us a level of governance that is consistent to our mandate. The fight will be relentless and it will be sustained.”5
IMMEDIATE REMINDER. A few weeks after he had become president, the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), a prestigious global organization of prominent magistrates, wrote Duterte, reminding him of the statements that he made during the inaugural address, i.e. his “adherence to due process” and “the rule of law is uncompromising.” The ICJ said:
“With that pledge in mind, we write to urge you to uphold the obligations of the Philippines under international human rights law to protect and promote the right to life, among other rights. To that end, we would request that your government take immediate and effective measures to counter the recent wave of unlawful killings as well as to address unresolved cases of extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances in the country.”6
The ICJ wrote Rodrigo Duterte, asking him to denounce unequivocally the extrajudicial killings, whether by alleged criminals or by any person in the Philippines. The ICJ urged the Government of the Philippines to conduct prompt and impartial investigations into the police operations that resulted in these deaths. Where there are allegations that persons have been arbitrarily deprived of their life, involving a violation of the right to life, international law requires that there must be a prompt, independent and effective investigation into such allegations and that those responsible be brought to justice, it said.
The ICJ’s letter to Duterte was followed by a briefer, which explained in detail its stand on his war on drugs and the subsequent spate of EJKs. It focused on three major points: first, the right to life and extrajudicial and arbitrary executions; second, the obligation of the State to probe those extrajudicial and arbitrary executions; and third, recommendations on the investigation of extrajudicial killings in the Philippines, prosecution of perpetrators, and compensating victims and their families.
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‘KILLING PEOPLE IS UNLAWFUL’
The ICJ briefing paper is most important because it explains in short, concise, and unequivocal terms that killing people is unlawful and even sinful on ethical grounds and that any person has the right to life. Nobody has the right to kill any person even if the latter is a social deviant and recidivist – criminal, drug addict, rapist, robber, or whatever. Every society has its laws to deal with social offenders. The briefing paper laid down the reasons extrajudicial executions are unacceptable. Citing provisions of the international law, it said:
“The most fundamental and basic of human rights is the right to life. Under Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which the Philippines is a State Party, ‘every human being has the inherent right to life.’ Article 6 of the ICCPR also says that the right to life ‘shall be protected by law’ and that ‘no one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life.’
“The right to life is the right from which all other human rights spring, the foundational or bedrock human right. The prohibition of arbitrary deprivation of life is a peremptory norm of international law, applicable to all States at all times. This means that this right cannot be overridden by other legal norms.”
In what appeared to be a lecture on Duterte’s perverted view and understanding of the law, the ICJ said in its briefing paper:
“Extrajudicial killings and arbitrary executions are methods of arbitrary deprivation of the right to life. The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) defines ‘extralegal, arbitrary or summary executions’ as the ‘deprivation of life without full judicial and legal process, and with the involvement, complicity, tolerance or acquiescence of the Government or its agents.’ It further explains that extralegal, arbitrary or summary executions include ‘death through the excessive use of force by police or security forces.’
“As explained by the mandate of the UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary executions, ‘arbitrary execution’ specifically refers to deaths caused by the ‘excessive, disproportionate and illegitimate use of force by law enforcement officers. If a law enforcement agent uses greater force than is necessary to achieve a legitimate objective and a person is killed,’ that would amount to an ‘arbitrary’ execution.’”
Brash reminders. In what appeared to be ICJ’s recognition of Duterte’s shortsighted and distorted view of trends in international law, the briefing paper gave an update on the trends, which Duterte hardly knew - the international criminal justice system. The ICJ said:
“Further defining this focus on law enforcement officials are two key documents concerning the circumstances in which police are able to use lethal force. The UN Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials provides that law enforcement officials may only use force when strictly necessary and to the extent required for the performance of their duty.
“The commentary on this provision explains that: ‘In no case should this provision be interpreted to authorize the use of force which is disproportionate to the legitimate objective to be achieved.’ Added to this, the UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials prohibits the use of firearms against persons ‘except in self-defense or defense of others against the imminent threat of death or serious injury, to prevent the perpetration of a particularly serious crime involving grave threat to life…’”
The ICJ appeared prescient about the bogus nature of police claims that EJKs victims fought back, ending in deaths. It was its way to say these police claims were unbelievable by any stretch of imagination. For this reason, the ICJ briefing paper reminded Duterte:
“These now well-accepted positions call for very careful examination of any assertions by law enforcement that the killing of a person is in response to threats made to the lives of police officers or others. Any threats of death must be grave and imminent.
“Any action in response to such threats must be proportionate, which means that all other reasonable alternatives in the circumstances, such as the apprehension or non-lethal incapacitation of suspects, must be exhausted before recourse to lethal force can be made. Best practice calls for the adoption of practical measures to ensure that law enforcement officials adhere to these requirements, such as the establishment of protocols, combined with training, the wearing of body cameras and the like.”
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DUTY TO PROBE EJKS
THE briefing paper, which the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) gave to Rodrigo Duterte seven weeks after he was sworn in as president was pivotal because it has laid down what it considered the duty of the state to probe those extrajudicial killings. It said unequivocally:
“Under international law, the Philippines is obliged to investigate extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary killings. This duty arises from the general obligation to respect and guarantee human rights, which is enshrined in Article 2(1) of the [International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, or ICCPR]. According to the UN Human Rights Committee, the legal obligation under Article 2(1) of the ICCPR is both negative and positive: while States parties must refrain from violating the rights recognized in the Covenant (e.g. they must not arbitrarily deprive persons of their life), States must also adopt legislative, administrative, judicial, educative and other necessary measures to protect these rights (e.g. they must protect against arbitrary deprivation of life, including by holding perpetrators to account).
“If the State fails to investigate allegations of extrajudicial killings, this could in and of itself give rise to a violation of the Covenant.
“The Human Rights Committee has further explained that the duty to investigate arises from the obligation of States Parties to the ICCPR to provide an effective remedy to victims of human rights violations, set out in Article 2(3) of the ICCPR, when read in conjunction with the right to life under Article 6.13 This duty is also an aspect of the obligation to respect, ensure respect for and implement international human rights law within the UN Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right to a Remedy and Reparation for Victims of Gross Violations of International Human Rights Law and Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law.”
The punchline:
“Investigations of extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary killings must be thorough, prompt, impartial and independent.
“Investigations of extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary killings should be geared towards establishing the crime committed and prosecuting those responsible for these crimes. Truth commissions or any group organized merely to establish “historical truth”, without intending to establish the facts of the extrajudicial killings and prosecuting those responsible, do not complete or substitute the State’s obligation to investigate under international law.”
RECOMMENDATIONS. The discussions would be incomplete without mentioning the ICJ’s recommendations to serve as the roadmap to the appropriate handling of the spate of EJKs in accordance with international law. Broadly, it asked the government of Rodrigo Duterte to conduct “prompt, independent and effective investigations into allegations of extrajudicial killings in the country.”
It asked the Philippine government to perform the following:
·
Direct
the prosecutors under the Department of Justice to investigate the EJKs, using what
it described “the Department’s established investigative procedures. If such
procedures are found to be inadequate because of lack of expertise or
impartiality, the Government of the Philippines should convene an independent
commission of inquiry to conduct such investigations.7
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Every person has a right to be presumed
innocent until proven guilty. Society has ways and processes to catch, prove
guilty and punish perpetrators of crimes.
This process must be followed, especially by agents of the law.
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