FACT CHECK: Duterte named in ICC documents on Philippine drug war case – Rappler

Posted: May 17, 2024 at 7:16 pm

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

This is contrary to a claim in a May 13, 2024 article in The Manila Times by columnist Rigoberto Tiglao

Claim: Former president Rodrigo Duterte is not named in the documents in the International Criminal Court (ICC) investigation into his administrations war on drugs.

Why we fact-checked this: The claim can be found in a May 13 article in The Manila Times by columnist Rigoberto Tiglao, titled Highly paid lawyer gathering dirt vs Duterte. The article alleged that lawyer Kristina Conti, who is also secretary-general of the National Union of Peoples Lawyers National Capital Region, was being paid to malign Duterte. (Conti, in a Facebook post, denied Tiglaos allegation.)

Tiglao claimed that former president Duterte was not named in the ICC investigation documents, writing: Conti and the Yellows have repeated in Hitlerian fashion that the ICC case is investigating the former president and [Senator Ronald] de la Rosa for these crimes. This is fake news. It is still an investigation of the Philippine situation, and there is no mention of Duterte in all of the ICCs documents on the case, which are labeled only as an investigation of the Situation in the Republic of the Philippines.'

The facts: Dutertes name has been mentioned in several ICC documents on the drug war case, which also state Situation in the Republic of the Philippines on the title page:

ICC investigation: In 2018, then-ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda opened a preliminary examination of the drug war killings. A full investigation was opened in 2021 and later temporarily suspended upon the Philippine governments request under Duterte. The probe resumed in July 2023. (TIMELINE: The International Criminal Court and Dutertes bloody war on drugs)

The ICC has not yet identified subjects or respondents, as this will only happen in a pre-trial stage, or the next stage after investigation. However, the prosecutors reports have named Duterte in the killings that appear to have been committed pursuant to an official State policy.

Under the Duterte administrations war on drugs, at least 6,252 individuals were killed in police operations, as recorded by the government, as of May 2022. Human rights groups, however, say the number is between 27,000 and 30,000 if people killed in vigilante-style executions are counted.

Previous related fact-checks: Rappler has previously fact-checked claims about Duterte and the ICC investigation.

Rappler has also fact-checked false claims by Tiglao in his columns:

Percival Bueser/ Rappler.com

Percival Bueser is a graduate of Rapplers fact-checking mentorship program. This fact check was reviewed by a member of Rapplers research team and a senior editor. Learn more about Rapplers fact-checking mentorship program here.

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FACT CHECK: Duterte named in ICC documents on Philippine drug war case - Rappler

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