Source:
https://scmp.com/news/asia/southeast-asia/article/2141574/i-will-arrest-you-rodrigo-duterte-warns-prosecutor
Asia/ Southeast Asia

‘I will arrest you’: Rodrigo Duterte warns chief prosecutor of International Criminal Court to steer clear of Philippines

Philippine police have since July 2016 killed more than 4,000 people they say are drug dealers who resisted arrest

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte. Photo: AFP

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has threatened to arrest the International Criminal Court’s (ICC’s) chief prosecutor if she conducts activities in his country, arguing it was no longer an ICC member so the court had no right to do any investigating.

Hitting out at what he said was an international effort to paint him as a “ruthless and heartless violator of human rights”, Duterte withdrew the Philippines from the ICC’s Rome Statute a month ago and promised to continue his crackdown on drugs, in which thousands have been killed.

In February the ICC chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda announced the start of a preliminary examination into a complaint by a Philippine lawyer  accusing Duterte and top officials of crimes against humanity, and of killing criminals as a policy.

Duterte has cited numerous reasons why he believes the ICC has no jurisdiction over him, and on Friday suggested that any doubts about that should have been dispelled by his withdrawal.

“What is your authority now? If we are not members of the treaty, why are you … in this country?,” he told reporters in comments aimed directly at Bensouda. “You cannot exercise any proceedings here without basis. That is illegal and I will arrest you.”

You cannot exercise any proceedings here without basis. That is illegal and I will arrest you Rodrigo Duterte

It is not clear whether Bensouda or the ICC has carried out any activities in the Philippines related to the complaint against Duterte.

The office of the prosecutor in The Hague and the Philippine foreign ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Police have, since July 2016, killed more than 4,000 people they say are drug dealers who resisted arrest. Activists say many of those were executions, which police deny.

Duterte has told security forces not to cooperate with any foreign investigators and last month said he would convince other ICC members to withdraw.

 He had earlier vowed to face the ICC and critics say pulling out is futile, because the ICC has jurisdiction to investigate alleged crimes committed in the period from when the Philippines joined in 2011 to when its withdrawal takes effect in March 2019.

Under the Rome Statute, the ICC can step in and exercise jurisdiction if states are unable or unwilling to investigate suspected crimes.

But the mercurial former mayor and his legal aides argue that, technically, the Philippines never  joined the ICC because it was not announced in the country’s official gazette.

“If there is no publication, it is as if there is no law at all,” Duterte said on Friday.