ICC judges reject request to release Duterte from custody


FORMER president Rodrigo Duterte will remain in detention at the International Criminal Court after appeals ­judges rejected a request to release him on health grounds.

The octogenarian is facing charges of crimes against humanity for his alleged involvement in dozens of killings as part of his so-called war on drugs when in office, first as a mayor and later as president.

Duterte’s lawyers failed to show that an October decision by the lower chamber was ­unreasonable, Judge Luz del Carmen Ibanez Carranza said, addressing the full courtroom in The Hague.

The former president was not in court on Friday.

Last month, judges decided to keep Duterte in custody, finding that he was likely to refuse to return for trial and could use his freedom to intimidate witnesses.

According to court filings, Duterte instructed and ­authorised “violent acts including murder to be committed against alleged criminals, including alleged drug dealers and users”.

The charges against him date from Nov 1, 2011, when he was still mayor of the southern city of Davao, to March 16, 2019, when the country withdrew from the court.

Estimates of the death toll ­during Duterte’s presidential term vary. National police put the figure at more than 6,000, while human rights groups claim up to 30,000.

The legal team requested that he be transferred to the custody of another member state while proceedings continue. However the appeals judges agreed with the lower chamber that the risk posed by his release “could not be mitigated” by the undisclosed country, Judge Ibanez said.

ICC prosecutors announced in February 2018 that they would open a preliminary investigation into the violence that took place during Duterte’s time in power.

In a move that human rights ­activists say was aimed at escaping accountability, Duterte, who was still president, announced a month later that the Philippines would leave the court.

Countries can’t abuse their right to withdraw from the Rome Statute, the court’s founding document, “by shielding persons from justice in relation to alleged crimes that are already under consideration,” judges wrote in the ruling in October. Duterte’s legal team has appealed this decision as well. — AP

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