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Philippine ex-president Duterte arrested after ICC warrant

Special Philippine ex-president Duterte arrested after ICC warrant
This handout photo taken and released by the Partido Demokratiko Pilipino–Lakas ng Bayan (PDP Laban) on March 11, 2025, shows former Philippines’ president Rodrigo Duterte, center, inside the Villamor Air Base in Pasay, Metro Manila, after arriving from Hong Kong. (AFP)
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Updated 11 March 2025

Philippine ex-president Duterte arrested after ICC warrant

Philippine ex-president Duterte arrested after ICC warrant
  • Court estimates death toll from Duterte’s anti-drug campaign could be 30,000
  • Any state can comply with ICC arrest warrant, human rights lawyer says

MANILA: Former President Rodrigo Duterte was taken into custody on Tuesday after the Philippine government said it received an International Criminal Court warrant over his involvement in suspected crimes against humanity related to the country’s bloody “war on drugs.”

The ICC had been investigating Duterte over his administration’s deadly anti-drugs campaign, in which according to official data over 6,000 Filipinos were killed during the ex-president’s six-year term since 2016. ICC prosecutors estimate, however, that the number of extrajudicial killings committed by security forces could be as many as 30,000.

He was arrested at Manila’s main airport after returning from a trip to Hong Kong, the office of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said in a statement.

“Earlier this morning, Interpol Manila received the official copy of the arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court,” the Presidential Communications Office said.

“Upon his arrival, the prosecutor general presented the ICC notification for an arrest warrant against the former president for crimes against humanity … As of now, he is in the custody of the authorities.”

Duterte won the Philippine presidency in 2016 on a promise to eradicate illegal drugs, after serving for more than two decades as mayor of Davao, the second-largest city in the Philippines, where he allegedly ran a deadly anti-drug crackdown with impunity.

The ensuing nationwide campaign drew international condemnation.

The 79-year-old has repeatedly defended the crackdown and denied the extrajudicial killing of alleged drug suspects, although he has also openly admitted to instructing police to kill in self-defense.

Duterte officially withdrew the Philippines from the ICC in 2019 as it began to look into allegations of systematic killings under his leadership.

But under the court’s withdrawal mechanism, it keeps jurisdiction over alleged crimes committed while a country was a member. While the Philippine government had refused to cooperate, the Marcos administration signaled in November that it would comply if an arrest warrant was issued.

The Philippines also remains a member of Interpol, which can seek Duterte’s arrest on behalf of the ICC.

“Under the rules of the ICC, any state, whether a state party or non-state party, can accede to the request of the ICC,” human rights lawyer Neri Colmenares told Arab News.

For the families of victims of Duterte’s deadly anti-drug campaign, his arrest has sparked new hopes for justice.

“The families of the victims see a light in, at least a glimmer of light, at the end of the tunnel for their search for justice for their loved ones who were mercilessly killed during the time of President Duterte,” Colmenares, who also serves as one of the legal counsels for the families, said.

“We will demand from President Marcos … that he should pursue the ends of justice, because that is his obligation under the Philippine laws, to execute the law and, of course, afford justice to the Filipino people.”

Rights group Karapatan is also calling on Marcos to make sure that Duterte “is actually delivered to the ICC for detention and trial.”

If transferred to the Hague, Duterte may become Asia’s first former head of state to go on trial at the ICC.

“(Marcos) should also cooperate in ensuring that Duterte is convicted by making available to the International Criminal Court additional pieces of evidence in the hands of the government,” Maria Sol Taule, Karapatan deputy secretary-general, said in a statement.

“With Duterte’s arrest, the Filipino people are hopefully a step closer to attaining justice and accountability for Duterte’s many crimes.”


UK trade unions call for government ban on Palestine Action to be overturned

UK trade unions call for government ban on Palestine Action to be overturned
Updated 12 sec ago

UK trade unions call for government ban on Palestine Action to be overturned

UK trade unions call for government ban on Palestine Action to be overturned
  • Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government banned the group under antiterrorism laws in July after members of the group allegedly damaged jets at a military base
  • Hundreds of protesters showing support for Palestine Action have been arrested at demonstrations in recent months, including more than 800 in London last weekend alone

LONDON: British trade unions have demanded that the UK government reverses its ban on a pro-Palestinian protest group.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government proscribed Palestine Action under antiterrorism laws in July after members of the group allegedly damaged jets at a military base.

Public displays of support for the group are outlawed under the ban, as a result of which hundreds of protesters have been arrested at demonstrations over the summer, including more than 800 in London last weekend alone.

Delegates at the annual conference of the Trades Union Congress, which concluded in Brighton on Wednesday, voted unanimously to demand that the government “repeal the authoritarian proscription of Palestine Action.”

The decision by the TUC, a federation that represents 47 unions with about 5.5 million members, is the latest sign of growing tensions over the conflict in Gaza between Starmer’s government and left-wing groups traditionally allied with the Labour Party. Many Labour MPs are also angry about the lack of tough action from UK authorities against Israel.

The TUC call for the ban on Palestinian Action to be overturned was part of an amendment to a broader motion calling on UK authorities to help secure an urgent ceasefire agreement and facilitate the delivery of aid into Gaza.

The amendment was proposed by the Public and Commercial Services Union, which represents civil servants. It also called for the government to “uphold and strengthen the right to peaceful protest, following the arrest of activists.”

Martin Cavanagh, president of the PCSU, said: “We believe this proscription represents a significant abuse of counterterrorism powers and a direct attack on our rights to protest against the genocidal Israeli regime.

“Since the proscription, it is clear that the policing has been particularly heavy-handed."


UK PM Starmer condemned for meeting Israel’s Herzog ‘while children starve’

UK PM Starmer condemned for meeting Israel’s Herzog ‘while children starve’
Updated 42 min 13 sec ago

UK PM Starmer condemned for meeting Israel’s Herzog ‘while children starve’

UK PM Starmer condemned for meeting Israel’s Herzog ‘while children starve’
  • MP Stephen Flynn berates Keir Starmer for meeting Israel’s head of state 
  • Politicians question legality of allowing Israeli leader into the country amid genocide allegations

LONDON: British MPs berated UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer for hosting the Israeli president on Wednesday “while children starve” in Gaza.

Starmer met Isaac Herzog in London for talks despite dozens of politicians, including from his own party, questioning how he was allowed into the country. 

During prime minister’s questions in parliament, the Scottish National Party’s Westminster leader, Stephen Flynn, angrily condemned Starmer over the meeting.

“Gaza is a graveyard,” he said. “What does it say of this prime minister that he will harbor this man whilst children starve?”

The MP said that Starmer had welcomed into his home a man who “called for the collective punishment of the Palestinian people and who signed the artillery shells that destroyed their homes, their families and their friends.”

He said that Starmer was opting to meet Herzog rather than ending arms sales to Israel and extending sanctions against the country in response to its war that has killed tens of thousands of civilians. 

The prime minister responded, saying that he “would not give up on diplomacy” in trying to bring peace to the region.

The British government has been accused of failing to take meaningful measures agains Israel for the war, which many academics, observers and governments describe as a genocide.

Starmer has threatened to recognize a Palestinian state if Israel does not comply with certain conditions over the conflict. The UK has also sanctioned extremist members of the Israeli government and suspended arms exports licenses for certain weapons used in Gaza.

However, there are widespread calls across the political spectrum for stronger action.

Sixty MPs and Lords called on the government to deny Herzog entry to the UK and said that his visit risked the government being complicit in genocide in Gaza, under a UN treaty.

Green Party leader Zack Polanski accused Herzog of being “complicit while the Israeli government has engaged in committing genocide in Gaza.”

He said that the Israeli president should be met with “handcuffs not handshakes” when he arrived for his meeting.

Herzog has previously said that there are “no innocent civilians in Gaza” and “it is an entire nation that is responsible.”

In December 2023, he signed an artillery shell with the words “I rely on you” before it was fired into Gaza as part of the war that started in October 2023.


UK PM expresses ‘confidence’ in ambassador to US after Epstein letter

UK PM expresses ‘confidence’ in ambassador to US after Epstein letter
Updated 10 September 2025

UK PM expresses ‘confidence’ in ambassador to US after Epstein letter

UK PM expresses ‘confidence’ in ambassador to US after Epstein letter
  • Peter Mandelson called the late Epstein his ‘best pal’ and an ‘intelligent, sharp-witted man’ in a 2003 letter
  • Mandelson: ‘I have no doubt at all that there’s a lot of traffic, correspondence exchanges between us, absolutely. And we know those are going to surface’

LONDON: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer backed the UK ambassador to Washington Peter Mandelson Wednesday after details emerged of the diplomat’s friendship with disgraced sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Mandelson called the late Epstein his “best pal” and an “intelligent, sharp-witted man” in a 2003 letter, released to the public just a week before US President Donald Trump was due to pay a state visit to Britain.
Challenged in parliament about his judgment in appointing the 71-year-old grandee of the center-left Labour party to the key diplomatic post, Starmer insisted that “due process was followed.”
He described Epstein as a “despicable criminal” who “destroyed the lives of so many women and girls.”
But he added: “The ambassador has repeatedly expressed his deep regret for his association with him. He is right to do so. I have confidence in him.”
The letter was one of many included in a book compiled to mark the now notorious financier’s 50th birthday.
The contents were published by a US congressional panel investigating Epstein’s sex crimes case.
Mandelson, an influential former Labour minister and spin doctor, said it was “very embarrassing” to see the letter published, in comments to The Sun daily’s “Harry Cole Saves the West” YouTube channel.
“I regret very, very deeply indeed carrying on that association with him for far longer than I should have done,” the ambassador said.
He said he had never witnessed any criminal behavior, but added he also felt a deep sense of sympathy for the women “who suffered as a result of (Epstein’s) behavior and his illegal criminal activities.”
Mandelson conceded that further embarrassing correspondence between himself and Epstein will come out, meaning Starmer will likely face further tricky questions about the appointment.
“I have no doubt at all that there’s a lot of traffic, correspondence exchanges between us, absolutely. And we know those are going to surface,” said Mandelson.
“We know they’re going to be very embarrassing, and they know that I’m going to profoundly regret ever having met him and been introduced to him in the first place.”
Those revelations trickled in on Wednesday, as The Sun and other media reported that Mandelson sent Epstein supportive emails as he faced prosecution in a Florida case for soliciting a minor.
Just before Epstein entered a plea deal in 2008 for the case, Mandelson allegedly wrote to Epstein that “I think the world of you and I feel hopeless and furious about what has happened” and urging him to “fight for early release.”
“Your friends stay with you and love you,” he added.
Mandelson, dubbed the “Prince of Darkness” during his years as a political spinner, was twice forced to resign from Tony Blair’s Labour government in the late 1990s and early 2000s over allegations of misconduct.


UK PM Starmer and Israeli president clash during ‘tough’ meeting

UK PM Starmer and Israeli president clash during ‘tough’ meeting
Updated 35 min 32 sec ago

UK PM Starmer and Israeli president clash during ‘tough’ meeting

UK PM Starmer and Israeli president clash during ‘tough’ meeting
  • Isaac Herzog: ‘Things were said that were tough and strong, and clearly we can argue, because when allies meet, they can argue. We are both democracies’
  • Starmer’s office said the British leader implored Herzog to change course over Gaza, expressing deep concern about the humanitarian crisis

LONDON: Israeli President Isaac Herzog said he had argued with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Downing Street on Wednesday during a “tough” meeting that covered deep disagreements over recent behavior by each other’s country.
The meeting comes a day after Israel expanded its attacks on Hamas by launching an airstrike aimed at killing the Islamist group’s political leaders in Qatar, a British ally in the Middle East, which Starmer condemned.
Israel has been angered by Britain’s plans to join several other Western countries, including France and Canada, in recognizing a Palestinian state later this month — unless Israel meets conditions including a ceasefire in Gaza.
“Things were said that were tough and strong, and clearly we can argue, because when allies meet, they can argue. We are both democracies,” Herzog said at a later Chatham House event.
He said Starmer’s plan for Palestinian statehood and his views on humanitarian aid in Gaza had been the root of the disagreement and added that he had invited the British government to undertake a fact-finding mission to Israel.
Starmer’s office said the British leader implored Herzog to change course over Gaza, expressing deep concern about the humanitarian crisis and urging Israel to allow in aid and halt offensive operations.
He reaffirmed that the UK and Israel were longstanding allies and said he remains committed to working toward an enduring peace for both Israelis and Palestinians.
Earlier, the two men briefly shook hands without smiling on the steps of Downing Street before they entered the building.
Starmer also raised with Herzog the Israeli airstrike on Qatar, condemning the incident as “completely unacceptable.”
“He said the strikes were a flagrant violation of a key partner’s sovereignty and do nothing to secure the peace we all desperately want to see,” a Downing Street spokesperson said.
The Gaza war has strained Israel’s relations with Britain and other European countries. Britain has blocked Israeli officials from attending its biggest defense trade show taking place this week.
Starmer is under pressure from politicians in his own party to take a tougher approach to Israel, but he told parliament on Wednesday that diplomacy was needed to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza and to get the Israeli hostages released by Hamas.
Herzog’s role as Israel’s president is mainly ceremonial but he caused anger when he said all residents of Gaza were responsible for the Hamas-led attack on Israel after the October 7 attacks in 2023.
Asked earlier on Wednesday why he was meeting Herzog, Starmer said: “I will not give up on diplomacy, that is the politics of students.”
Wes Streeting, who is health minister in Starmer’s government, said this week that Israel’s handling of the war in Gaza was leading it to “pariah status.”
Starmer also hosted Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Monday, where they agreed there would be “absolutely no role” for Hamas in the future governance of a Palestinian state.
Britain has promised to recognize a Palestinian state ahead of the UN General Assembly later this month unless Israel meets four conditions, including ending the war in Gaza and allowing more aid into the Palestinian enclave. 


Thunberg calls for Gaza genocide to be taught in schools

Thunberg calls for Gaza genocide to be taught in schools
Updated 10 September 2025

Thunberg calls for Gaza genocide to be taught in schools

Thunberg calls for Gaza genocide to be taught in schools
  • Pupils should learn about ‘early warning signs of genocide, such as the Holocaust, and apply those to what we are currently seeing to make sure it doesn’t happen again,’ she says
  • Greta Thunberg: ‘I didn’t learn about what was going on in Palestine in school because it was always portrayed as a conflict’

LONDON: Swedish activist Greta Thunberg has called for the genocide in Gaza to be taught in schools.

The 22-year-old, speaking while participating in the Global Sumud Flotilla that is delivering humanitarian aid to Palestine, said: “I think (schools) should bring up early warning signs of genocide, such as the Holocaust, and apply those to what we are currently seeing to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

“The current education systems have absolutely failed us in teaching an understanding of the historic times we are living in.”

Teaching pupils about the Holocaust as part of the high school history curriculum is a legal requirement in England. Schools also mark Holocaust Memorial Day on Jan. 27 in commemoration of the millions of people murdered during the Second World War by the Nazis, as well as the victims of later genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.

Thunberg said that she had been inspired by the example of British people who have protested against the UK government ban on the activist group Palestine Action, The Times newspaper reported.

“I’m very inspired by the huge mobilization that has been happening in the UK for the people of Palestine, which I think we can learn a lot from. People of all ages, not only student encampments but also those brave people who might face terror charges just by saying they support Palestine Action.

“I didn’t learn about what was going on in Palestine in school because it was always portrayed as a conflict.

“Then, when you discover that this is a genocide, this is an occupation, an apartheid, ethnic cleansing, then it is not at all what we have been taught in school.”

International law defines genocide as actions undertaken with the intent to destroy, partly or as a whole, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.

The UK government concluded this week that Israel’s actions in Gaza do not constitute genocide. However, a UN special committee previously found the actions to be “consistent with the characteristics of genocide.” Thunberg said it is now “undeniable” that a genocide is happening in Gaza.