Former Philippines leader Rodrigo Duterte was sent to The Hague yesterday hours after he was arrested in Manila at the request of the International Criminal Court as part of its probe into a “war on drugs” that defined his presidency.
Duterte, who led the Philippines from 2016 to 2022, was arrested yesterday, marking the biggest step yet in the ICC’s probe into alleged crimes against humanity during an anti-drugs crackdown that killed thousands and drew condemnation around the world.
Duterte, 79, could become the first Asian former head of state to go on trial at the ICC.
“The plane is en route to the Hague, in the Netherlands, allowing the former president to face charges of crimes against humanity in relation to his bloody war on drugs,” Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr told a Press conference.
“We did not help the International Criminal Court in any way. The arrest was made in compliance with Interpol.”
The war on drugs was the signature campaign platform that swept to power the mercurial crime-buster nicknamed “the punisher”, who soon delivered on promises he made during vitriolic speeches that thousands of drug pushers would be killed.
His detention follows years of him rebuking and taunting the ICC in profanity-laden speeches since he unilaterally withdrew the Philippines from the court’s founding treaty in 2019 as it started looking into allegations of systematic murders of drug dealers on his watch.
The ICC, a court of last resort, says it has jurisdiction to investigate alleged crimes that took place while a country was a member.
Duterte has long insisted he instructed police to kill only in self-defence and has always defended the crackdown, repeatedly telling his supporters he was ready to “rot in jail” if it meant ridding the Philippines of illicit drugs.
According to police, 6,200 suspects were killed during anti-drug operations under Duterte’s presidency that they say ended in shootouts. But activists say the real toll was far greater, with many thousands more slumland drug users gunned down in mysterious circumstances, some of whom were on community “watch lists” having signed up for treatment.
The prosecutor of the ICC has said as many as 30,000 people may have been killed by police or unidentified individuals.