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ICC takes custody of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte

ICC takes custody of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte
A supporter of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte waves a flag as he demonstrates outside the International Criminal Court detention center near The Hague in Scheveningen, Netherlands, on March 12, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 13 March 2025

ICC takes custody of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte

ICC takes custody of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte
  • The court said in a statement that “as a precautionary measure medical assistance” was made available at the airport for Duterte
  • If his case goes to trial and he is convicted, the 79-year-old Duterte could face a maximum sentence of life imprisonment

THE HAGUE: The International Criminal Court said Wednesday that former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has been surrendered to its custody, to face allegations of crimes against humanity stemming from deadly anti-drug crackdowns during his time in office.
The court said in a statement that “as a precautionary measure medical assistance” was made available at the airport for Duterte, in line with standard procedures when a suspect arrives.
Rights groups and families of victims have hailed Duterte’s arrest Tuesday in Manila on an ICC warrant, which was announced by current Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos.
Within days, Duterte will face an initial appearance where the court will confirm his identity, check that he understands the charges against him and set a date for a hearing to assess if prosecutors have sufficient evidence to send him to a full trial.
If his case goes to trial and he is convicted, the 79-year-old Duterte could face a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
The small jet taxied into a hangar where two buses were waiting. An ambulance also drove close to the hangar, and medics wheeled a gurney inside. There was no immediate sign of Duterte. A police helicopter hovered close to the airport as the plane remained in the hangar, largely obscured from view by the buses and two fuel tanker trucks.
ICC spokesperson Fadi El Abdallah confirmed that Duterte was on the plane, which made a stopover in Dubai during its flight from Manila.
Duterte’s arrest was announced Tuesday by current President Marcos, who said the former leader was arrested when he returned from a trip to Hong Kong and that he was sent aboard a plane to the ICC.
Grieving families are hopeful
“This is a monumental and long-overdue step for justice for thousands of victims and their families,” said Jerrie Abella of Amnesty International.
“It is therefore a hopeful sign for them, as well, in the Philippines and beyond, as it shows that suspected perpetrators of the worst crimes, including government leaders, will face justice wherever they are in the world,” Abella added.
Emily Soriano, the mother of a victim of the crackdowns, said she wanted more officials to face justice.
“Duterte is lucky he has due process, but our children who were killed did not have due process,” she said.
While Duterte’s plane was in the air, grieving relatives gathered in the Philippines to mourn his alleged victims, carrying the urns of their loved ones. “We are happy and we feel relieved,” said 55-year-old Melinda Abion Lafuente, mother of 22-year-old Angelo Lafuente, who she says was tortured and killed in 2016.
Duterte’s supporters, however, criticized his arrest as illegal and sought to have him returned home. Small groups of Duterte supporters and people who backed his arrest demonstrated on Wednesday outside the court before his arrival.
ICC investigation
The ICC opened an inquiry in 2021 into mass killings linked to the so-called war on drugs overseen by Duterte when he served as mayor of the southern Philippine city of Davao and later as president.
Estimates of the death toll during Duterte’s presidential term vary, from the more than 6,000 that the national police have reported and up to 30,000 claimed by human rights groups.
ICC judges who looked at prosecution evidence supporting their request for his arrest found “reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Duterte is individually responsible for the crime against humanity of murder” as an “indirect co-perpetrator for having allegedly overseen the killings when he was mayor of Davao and later president of the Philippines,” according to his warrant.
What happens next?
Duterte could challenge the court’s jurisdiction and the admissibility of the case. While the Philippines is no longer a member of the ICC, the alleged crimes happened before Manila withdrew from the court.
That process will likely take months and if the case progresses to trial it could take years. Duterte will be able to apply for provisional release from the court’s detention center while he waits, though it’s up to judges to decide whether to grant such a request.
Duterte’s legal counsel, Salvador Panelo, told reporters in Manila that the Philippine Supreme Court “can compel the government to bring back the person arrested and detained without probable cause and compel the government bring him before the court and to explain to them why they (government) did what they did.”
Marcos said Tuesday that Duterte’s arrest was “proper and correct” and not an act of political persecution.
Duterte’s daughter, Vice President Sara Duterte, criticized the Marcos administration for surrendering her father to a foreign court, which she said currently has no jurisdiction in the Philippines.
She left the Philippines on Wednesday to arrange a meeting in The Hague with her detained father and talk to his lawyers, her office told reporters in Manila.
Philippines no longer an ICC member state
Duterte withdrew the Philippines in 2019 from the ICC, in a move human rights activists say was aimed at escaping accountability.
The Duterte administration moved to suspend the global court’s investigation in late 2021 by arguing that Philippine authorities were already looking into the same allegations, arguing that the ICC — a court of last resort — therefore didn’t have jurisdiction.
Appeals judges at the ICC rejected those arguments and ruled in 2023 that the investigation could resume.
The ICC judges who issued the warrant also said that the alleged crimes fall within the court’s jurisdiction. They said Duterte’s arrest was necessary because of what they called the “risk of interference with the investigations and the security of witnesses and victims.”


At least 193 passengers killed in two boat accidents in northwestern Congo

At least 193 passengers killed in two boat accidents in northwestern Congo
Updated 32 sec ago

At least 193 passengers killed in two boat accidents in northwestern Congo

At least 193 passengers killed in two boat accidents in northwestern Congo
  • Several people were missing, but the reports did not give a figure of how many

KINSHASA, Congo: Two separate boat accidents this week in northwestern Congo killed at least 193 people dead and left scores missing, authorities and state media reported Friday
The accidents happened on Wednesday and Thursday, about 150 kilometers apart in the Equateur province.
One boat with nearly 500 passengers caught fire and capsized Thursday evening along the Congo River in the province’s Lukolela territory, Congo’s humanitarian affairs ministry said in a report. The report said 209 survivors were rescued following the accident, involving a whaleboat near the village of Malange in Lukolela territory.
A day earlier, a motorized boat capsized in the Basankusu territory of the province, killing at least 86 people, most of them students, state media reported. Several people were missing, but the reports did not give a figure of how many.
It was not immediately clear what caused either accident or whether rescue operations were continuing Friday evening.
State media attributed Wednesday’s accident to “improper loading and night navigation,” citing reports from the scene. Images that appeared to be from the scene showed villagers gathered around bodies as they mourned.
A local civil society group blamed Wednesday’s accident on the government and claimed the toll was higher. Authorities could not be immediately reached for comment.
The capsizing of boats is becoming increasingly frequent in this central African nation as more people are abandoning the few available roads for cheaper, wooden vessels crumbling under the weight of passengers and their goods.
In such trips, life jackets are rare and the vessels are usually overloaded.
Many of the boats also travel at night, complicating rescue efforts during accidents and leaving many bodies often unaccounted for.

 

 


Serbia’s opposing camps hold parallel rallies, reflecting deep political crisis

Serbia’s opposing camps hold parallel rallies, reflecting deep political crisis
Updated 42 min 48 sec ago

Serbia’s opposing camps hold parallel rallies, reflecting deep political crisis

Serbia’s opposing camps hold parallel rallies, reflecting deep political crisis
  • No major incidents were reported at the rallies held in a number of cities and towns with police separating the two camps
  • Vucic said that “people want to live normally, they don’t want to be harassed and want to be free”

BELGRADE: Anti-government protesters and supporters of President Aleksandar Vucic held parallel rallies throughout Serbia on Saturday, reflecting a deep political crisis in the Balkan country following more than 10 months of protests against the populist government.
Vucic’s Serbian Progressive Party recently started organizing its own demonstrations to counter persistent student-led protests that have challenged the president’s firm grip on power in Serbia.
No major incidents were reported at the rallies held in a number of cities and towns with police separating the two camps. Brief scuffles erupted in the capital, Belgrade, when riot police pushed away anti-government protesters as Vucic joined his supporters in a show of confidence.
Vucic said that “people want to live normally, they don’t want to be harassed and want to be free.”
Vucic has refused a student demand to call an early parliamentary election. He has instead stepped up a crackdown on the protests, which have drawn hundreds of thousands of people in the past months. More than 100 university professors have been dismissed, while police have faced accusations of brutality against peaceful demonstrators.
Vucic has accused student-led protesters of being “terrorists” who are working against their country under orders from the West. He hasn’t offered any evidence for such claims.
The protests first started in November last year after a concrete canopy collapse at a renovated train station in the northern city of Novi Sad killed 16 people. It ignited a nationwide movement seeking justice for the victims and blaming corruption-fueled negligence for the tragedy.


Thousands of demonstrators join pro-Palestinian march in Auckland

Some 50,000 attended the rally in central Auckland on Saturday.
Some 50,000 attended the rally in central Auckland on Saturday.
Updated 50 min 10 sec ago

Thousands of demonstrators join pro-Palestinian march in Auckland

Some 50,000 attended the rally in central Auckland on Saturday.
  • Palestinian authorities have said that more than 64,000 people have been killed in the conflict in Gaza, while humanitarian organizations say a shortage of food is leading to widespread starvation

NEW ZEALAND: Thousands took part in a pro-Palestinian march in Auckland, New Zealand’s biggest city, on Saturday, in what organizers said was the largest rally of its kind since the war in Gaza began between Israel and Hamas.
Some 50,000 attended the March for Humanity rally in central Auckland on Saturday morning, the Aotearoa for Palestine group said. 
New Zealand police estimated the attendance at 20,000.
Aotearoa for Palestine spokesperson Arama Rata said it was New Zealand’s largest march in support of Palestinians since the conflict broke out in Gaza, when Israel started an offensive in retaliation for a cross-border attack that killed about 1,200 people in October 2023.

FASTFACT

Many in Saturday’s protest crowd carried Palestinian flags and banners with slogans including ‘Don’t normalize genocide’ and ‘Grow a spine, stand with Palestine.’

Palestinian authorities have said that more than 64,000 people have been killed in the conflict in Gaza, while humanitarian organizations say a shortage of food is leading to widespread starvation.
Many in Saturday’s protest crowd carried Palestinian flags and banners with slogans including “Don’t normalize genocide” and “Grow a spine, stand with Palestine,” public broadcaster Radio New Zealand reported.
Organizers, motivated by a march that shut down Sydney’s iconic Harbor Bridge in August, wanted to close a major city bridge with Saturday’s rally, Rata said, but were forced to abandon those plans on Friday due to strong winds.
Police said there were no arrests at the march and that roads along the route were being reopened.
Aotearoa for Palestine said it wanted New Zealand’s center-right coalition government to impose sanctions on Israel.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon in August described recent Israeli actions in Gaza, including a lack of humanitarian assistance, as “utterly appalling,” and New Zealand has been weighing up whether to recognize a Palestinian state.
The New Zealand Jewish Council, a body representing around 10,000 Jews who live in the country, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the march.

 


Romania says Russian drone breached its airspace

Romania says Russian drone breached its airspace
Updated 13 September 2025

Romania says Russian drone breached its airspace

Romania says Russian drone breached its airspace
  • NATO member Romania has had several drone fragments crash on its soil since Moscow invaded Ukraine
  • The jets “detected a drone in national airspace” and tracked it until “it disappeared from the radar“

BUCHAREST: Romania’s defense ministry said Saturday that the country’s airspace had been breached by a drone during a Russian attack on infrastructure in neighboring Ukraine.
The incident came after Poland denounced the intrusion of Russian drones into its airspace this week, calling on Moscow to avoid further “provocations.”
NATO member Romania has had several drone fragments crash on its soil since Moscow invaded Ukraine, especially as Russia has stepped up attacks on Ukrainian ports.
The country scrambled two F-16 fighter jets late on Saturday to monitor the situation following strikes on Ukraine, said a defense ministry statement.
The jets “detected a drone in national airspace” and tracked it until “it disappeared from the radar” near the village of Chilia Veche, it added.
The drone “did not fly over populated areas and did not pose an imminent threat to the safety of the population,” said the statement.
Teams were ready to be deployed “to begin searching for possible debris from the aerial vehicle.”
In February, Romania’s upper house of parliament adopted a law that makes it possible for the country to shoot down drones breaching its airspace.


Blast on Russian railway kills two

Blast on Russian railway kills two
Updated 13 September 2025

Blast on Russian railway kills two

Blast on Russian railway kills two
  • The incident took place as officials conducted an inspection of the track, he said
  • He did not give the identity of those killed

MOSCOW: An explosive device detonated on a section of railway in Russia’s western Oryol region Saturday, killing two people and wounding another, the region’s governor said.
The incident took place as officials conducted an inspection of the track, he said.
“Unfortunately, two people were killed and one was injured,” governor Andrei Klychkov wrote on Telegram.
He did not give the identity of those killed, but the governor of the neighboring Kursk region said they were officers of Russia’s national guard.
Russia’s railway network has been repeatedly rocked by derailments, blasts and fires that authorities blame on Ukrainian sabotage.
Kyiv does not typically claim responsibility but often cheers such attacks on, arguing Russia uses its train network to deliver troops and fuel to its forces fighting in Ukraine.
The blast on Saturday delayed at least 10 trains traveling to and from southern Russia, Moscow’s railway service said.