'No one can stop' Sara Duterte impeachment trial: Philippine House prosecutors


Philippine senators are seated after taking their oath as jurors in the impeachment trial of Vice-President Sara Duterte, in Manila on June 10, 2025. - Photo: AFP

MANILA: House of Representatives prosecutors said Wednesday (June 11) that Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte's impeachment trial could not be stopped despite the Senate sending the case back to them hours after convening as a court.

Prosecutors told an afternoon press briefing their case had complied strictly with the constitution, adding they would seek clarification over what they called "confusing" Senate orders.

Duterte was impeached in early February on charges of graft, corruption and an alleged assassination plot against former ally and running mate President Ferdinand Marcos.

A guilty verdict would see her removed from office and permanently barred from politics.

"No one can stop this anymore, because jurisdiction has been acquired already by the impeachment court," said Congresswoman Gerville Luistro, pointing to the Senate's issuing of a summons for Duterte late Wednesday night.

"There will be no... withdrawal (of the impeachment case) by the House. That is not allowed by the constitution."

Tuesday night's 18-5 Senate vote ordered the House to certify it had not violated the constitution by hearing three impeachment complaints before the one that ultimately went to a vote.

The constitution bars subjecting anyone to multiple impeachment proceedings within the same year.

But House member Ysabel Maria Zamora said the final impeachment complaint had "consolidated all the articles" of the first three into one.

A second order to guarantee the case would move forward after new House members take their seats on June 30 was "impossible" to fulfil as they could not speak for a future Congress, prosecutors said.

Outside the Senate, several hundred protesters gathered Wednesday, shouting slogans and pounding on the gates as they called for the body to follow through with the impeachment trial.

- 'Political survival' -

The Senate's vote to remand was as much a matter of "political survival" as anything, lawyer and former senator Leila de Lima told AFP Wednesday.

De Lima, who warned more than a week ago the Senate could move to kill the impeachment, said the spectre of a still-powerful Duterte was likely on lawmakers' minds.

"Loyalty, friendship, political survival. Maybe they are thinking the Dutertes are very much around even if the patriarch (ex-president Rodrigo Duterte) is in The Hague," she said.

The elder Duterte has been imprisoned since March when he was arrested and transferred to the International Criminal Court to face charges tied to his deadly drug war.

His daughter has been widely mooted as a presidential candidate in 2028 should she survive the impeachment process.

Senators "were trying to protect their political ambitions," agreed Congresswoman France Castro, who endorsed an early impeachment complaint against the vice president.

Asked at Wednesday's press briefing if he believed the Senate was deliberately delaying the trial, Congressman Keith Flores said the answer was clear.

"I cannot speak for everyone but for me, yes." - AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Singapore diners unfazed if budget meal options shrink, many prefer regular coffee shop fare
India fines IndiGo record US$2.45mil over mass flight cancellations
The Philippines moves to shore up investor sentiment hit by major corruption scandal
At 90, she still knocks on doors and looks out for her elderly neighbours in Toa Payoh
South Korea reports first African swine fever case in two months; authorities cull thousands of pigs
As China’s US exports plunge in 2025, Beijing banks on diversification for 2026 growth
No talks with Umno on 'grand collaboration' yet, says Bersatu's Muhyiddin
Sabah's 40% revenue share: Drop appeal if sincere, Upko tells Putrajaya
Coach Wan Wah fuels Japanese rise but Aaron-Wooi Yik out to halt the surge
Jun Hao eyes reset in Jakarta after Indian Open setback

Others Also Read