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WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ‘FISHBALL WARRIOR’ ALVIN KARINGAL?

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In the neighborhood where the Karingals live —PHOTO BY MARI-AN C. SANTOS

The video was posted on Sept. 21, the day marked by huge rallies at Rizal Park, Edsa and elsewhere protesting the large-scale corruption in flood control projects and calling for the accountability of crooked contractors and state officials.

It shows a man wearing a red shirt, with his right fist raised, and looking straight at the camera. He is shouting in Filipino that the costs of street food—kikiam, fishball, tokneneng, kwek-kwek, calamares—should be brought down. It elicited mostly laughing emojis and quickly went viral, and netizens christened the man as, variously, “fishball warrior,” “kwek-kwek boy,” and “tusok-tusok boy.”

But hours later, a photo of him wearing the same red shirt and showing him being dragged by a policeman in anti-riot gear circulated online. As news spread of the rioting that occurred on C.M. Recto in Manila, some netizens theorized that he was among those injured (or worse).

I searched diligently for information on the so-called “fishball warrior.” From online comments, I found out his name: Alvin Karingal. And that he lives not far from where I live.

Mean and Alvin Karingal took a selfie with then Manila Mayor Honey Lacuna, during the Sto. Niño de Pandacan fiesta in January 2025. —PHOTO COURTESY OF MEAN KARINGAL

I saw a longer version of the video in which he also shouts in Filipino: “Back to the provinces! Lower the price of rice, laptops, and cellphones!”

Another video that also went viral was that of Alvin’s mother, Mean Karingal, looking for him on the night of Sept. 21 and appealing for help to find him. Alvin, it turns out, has special needs. From then until Sept. 24, I searched for a way to track down his mother and get the latest news about him. I hoped he was okay.

Thankfully, in an update on her social media account, lawyer Maria Sol Taule of the rights group Karapatan said she was allowed to see those arrested and held by the police and that she had given Alvin his medication on Sept. 23.

Through our church organization, I found Jo, who is acquainted with Mean Karingal. On Sept. 24, Mean sent word to me that we could talk the next morning.

Mean’s account

Reaching Mean’s neighborhood from my house required a jeepney ride and a walk through a complicated web of one-meter-wide alleys that receive very little sunlight. The Karingal dwelling is a one-room affair measuring 15-20 square meters. Besides Mean and her only son Alvin, her mother and her aunt also live here.

I bring the good news that my friend, a mental health advocate, is willing to help Alvin with a steady supply of his medication. Mean is profusely grateful but her most pressing concern is that since Sept. 21, Alvin has not come home.

Here is Mean’s account to CoverStory, narrated in Filipino:

On Sept. 21 Mean was on her way home after serving at the evening Mass at the Sto. Nino de Pandacan parish church (she is a member of the Mother Butler Guild) when someone showed her the video of Alvin among those marching to Mendiola. She had been wondering all day where her son was, and looking at the video made her heart pound: “I had heard that violence had erupted and I was worried.”

Soon after she got home, a barangay tanod and a pedicab driver knocked on her door and told her that Alvin had been arrested by Manila police.

Immediately she headed to the headquarters of the Manila Police District (MPD) on United Nations Avenue. She got there around 8 p.m. and joined the crowd of people milling outside, many of them weeping. Frantic, she asked the first policeman she saw to check if her son was among those arrested. He replied that, so far, they only had minors aged 11 to 19 inside. He told her to wait for the truck that would bring in a second batch.

At 9 p.m. Mean was wracked by anxiety and could not stay still, so she inquired about Alvin from another policeman. He also replied that so far they only had minors in custody. (According to Attorney Taule, police records show that a total of 91 minors were arrested.)

Mean wondered why, with so many policemen around, they couldn’t list the names of those they had in custody, so that those looking for family members could have some answers, to allay their fears. She wondered why the police had no compassion for mothers.

While waiting, she heard whispers that some protesters had been shot dead, that some had been beaten up and taken to hospital.

She thought of looking for Alvin in the nearby hospitals instead of standing idly. She went by jeepney to the Philippine General Hospital, then Ospital ng Maynila, then San Lazaro Hospital, and finally Jose Reyes Medical Center. But she did not find him.

She got back at the MPD headquarters past midnight. Again, she asked the police about her son, but all she was told was that they were understaffed given the large volume of arrests, and thus could not yet provide answers to those looking for their children. The police said they were still waiting for word from their chief, and told the restless crowd to return at 10 a.m.

Mean arrived home at 3 a.m. on Sept. 22, exhausted but unable to sleep.

Mean Karingal in her home —PHOTO BY MARI-AN C. SANTOS

Same answer

Here is the rest of Mean’s account to CoverStory, narrated in Filipino:

She was back at 10 a.m. on the dot at the MPD headquarters and asked about her son. The answer was the same: Only minors in custody, no list yet.

She learned that some of those waiting patiently outside had not bothered to go home and instead found spots to sit and manage a catnap. She joined them and found out from whispers that the police had rounded up more than 200 persons.

By dusk of Sept. 22, she still had to receive word about Alvin. A church friend suggested that she check the precincts nearby. As she waited for the rain to subside, her phone rang. It was a member of the GMA News crew that she met the previous night, offering to take her in their van wherever she needed to go.

They first went to Precinct 10, where the officer in charge confirmed that Alvin had been taken there. She felt such huge relief. But she had to wait a little more: He had been taken to the MPD headquarters and would return shortly.

When Mean finally saw Alvin arrive at the precinct with police escorts, she was beyond relieved. She asked him how he was. “I’m OK, Ma,” he said.

Honor student

Alvin was born in 1992. He received his primary education at Celedonio Salvador Elementary School in Paco and attended high school at Erda Technical and Vocational School in Pandacan. He was a consistent honor student but by the end of his sophomore year, he got bored and dropped out. He eventually passed and earned an Alternative Learning System certificate. He enrolled in a computer science course at Informatics on Recto. He was even a scholar of then Manila Vice Mayor Isko Moreno. But at the end of the first semester, on the day of the final exams, he walked out of the class. When his mother asked him why, he simply said he had a headache and decided to go home.

“I realize now that I should have taken him to a medical professional then,” Mean said.

The single mother worked in Saipan for two years, but swiftly returned after she was told that Alvin had been neglecting his personal hygiene, sometimes not even bathing.

In 2018, Alvin was diagnosed with schizophrenia. The Department of Health said in 2023 that more than 3.6 million Filipinos are afflicted with mental disorders, and schizophrenia is among the most common.

Alvin’s last checkup at the National Center for Mental Health was in July. He has not been back because, Mean said, he doesn’t want to as he refuses to accept that he is ill. Updated prescriptions are required; otherwise, the Malasakit Center staff will not give her the medicines for free. She has since had to buy them, including one that Alvin is supposed to take twice daily.

Mean supports her mother, aunt, and son from income she makes selling such food items as biscuits and peanut butter.

Alvin is popular in their community. According to Jo, who lives in the adjacent barangay, she sometimes hears him talking about the latest national issues. He even ran independently as mayor of Manila in the last election, in which his opponents included Isko Moreno, now the incumbent, and Honey Lacuna. Upon his loss, he said he would run for barangay captain next.

He is regarded as a fixture in the neighborhood, of no cause for concern. In jest, they have come to call him “Mayor.”

At the inquest held on Thursday afternoon, Mean showed the fiscal Alvin’s ID as a person with disability, the doctor’s diagnosis, and prescriptions. She was told that these would be noted in his file.

According to Ricky Balicas Jr., RN, PhD, the founder of the Anxiety and Depression Support Group, people with special needs should not be held in the conditions that Alvin experienced.

The time period is also well beyond the allowed 36-hour window for cases to be brought against those arrested without a warrant, per the Revised Penal Code.

Still in custody

CoverStory’s conversation with Mean was interrupted by a phone call from her lawyer telling her to come to the MPD headquarters. She immediately got ready. It is only about 300 meters from her house. There is a mini-bus that passes by the MPD, for ₱15, but it is infrequent. Because she was in a hurry, she took a pedicab for ₱20 to the main road, then a tricycle to take her to the MPD, for ₱50.

As we got into the tricycle, the drivers standing around shouted that they were sending Alvin their regards. And that everyone should fight for the lowering of the prices of kwek kwek and other street food.

Release Alvin, they shouted: “Palabasin nyo na ‘yan!”

As of this writing, Alvin remains in custody. Mean is worried about his welfare. “I can’t help but think, maybe he or someone else held there will get angry and lose his temper for no reason,” she said in Filipino. “Of course, you know the behavior of people inside; we don’t know what could happen. I hope nothing untoward will occur. I just pray. I’m trying to calm myself.”

I thought that this story is unravelling like a film by Lino Brocka or Ishmael Bernal, except that it’s another Marcos in the seat of power this time. Mean and Alvin’s tiny dwelling is only about three kilometers away from Malacañang Palace, the home of the President—but they are worlds away.

Read more: Return the money, jail the crooks: Vigorous protests again animate the motherland

First published in CoverStory – September 27, 2025

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SENATORS GO AND DELA ROSA NAMED AMONG DUTERTE’S ‘CO-PERPETRATORS’

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Senators Christopher “Bong” Go and Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa —PHOTOS FROM BONG GO AND RONALD BATO DELA ROSA FB

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has named Senators Christopher “Bong” Go and Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa as well as other former ranking government officials as co-perpetrators of ex-President Rodrigo Duterte’s bloody “war on drugs.” Go ranked first and Dela Rosa third in the midterm senatorial elections last year.

As chief of the Philippine National Police (PNP) from July 2016 to April 2018, Dela Rosa was the main implementor of Duterte’s anti-narcotics campaign. He also served as chief of the Davao City Police from January 2012 to October 2013. 

Go was a longtime aide to Duterte when he was mayor of Davao City and took the role of special assistant from June 2016 to October 2018 during his presidency. 

The others named by the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) as part of the “hierarchy” of Duterte’s drug war are: former PNP chief Camilo Cascolan (now deceased), former PNP chief Oscar Albayalde, former Davao City police chief Vicente Danao, former justice secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II, former National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) chief Dante Gierran, and former Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency chief Isidro Lapeña. 

Gierran also served as NBI regional director of Davao from 2013 to 2016. Lapeña was chief of the Davao City Police from 1996 to 1998.

There are other ranking government officials including from the PNP on the list, but the OTP did not name them.

‘Common plan’

“At least between 1 November 2011 and 16 March 2019, DUTERTE and his co-perpetrators shared a common plan or agreement to ‘neutralise’ alleged criminals in the Philippines (including those perceived or alleged to be associated with drug use, sale or production) through violent crimes including murder,” the OTP said in a document made public on Feb. 14, a “lesser redacted” version of its preconfirmation brief on July 24, 2025.

The document also stated that during Duterte’s term as mayor, he, together with Go and other officials mentioned, “used police from Davao City and non-police hitmen” such as the Davao Death Squad to kill alleged criminals.

“In their new geographically expanded roles, the co-perpetrators controlled the will of the physical perpetrators through a mechanism that ensured their automatic compliance with their orders,” the document read.

In a Facebook post, human rights lawyer and ICC assistant to counsel Kristina Conti said the inclusion of Dela Rosa, Go, and former officials close to Duterte showed that “the plan was crafted not only to ensure implementation, but to ensure impunity.”

“The involvement of those in the investigating units, which should have acted as the killings happened, is material to the plan. This also emphasizes that the ‘war on drugs’ began in Davao,” Conti said. 

Out of the public eye

In March 2025, shortly after Duterte was arrested on charges of crimes against humanity and taken into ICC custody, Dela Rosa said he was “ready to join” and “take care” of the ex-president in The Hague in the Netherlands. 

But Dela Rosa has not been reporting for work at the Senate and has been out of the public eye since November, when Ombudsman Jesus Crispin Remulla made a yet unproven statement that a warrant for his arrest had been issued by the ICC. Dela Rosa has yet to make a public statement on the latest development. 

Go issued a statement on Saturday, saying: “I dispute these allegations, which are entirely unfounded, one-sided, unfair, and bear no relation to the reality of my roles and responsibilities during my service as Special Assistant to the President from June 2016 to October 2018, as well as Executive Assistant to the Mayor of Davao City from 1998 to 2016.” 

According to Go, he has upheld the highest standards of integrity, transparency, and dedication for the people throughout his career in public service.

“I will not allow these baseless accusations to distract me from my responsibilities as a duly elected Senator of the Republic. My focus remains steadfastly on serving the Filipino people—particularly the poor and vulnerable,” he said. 

Former justice secretary Aguirre also denied involvement in the extrajudicial killings in Duterte’s drug war on Saturday. The other named co-perpetrators have yet to issue a statement as of this writing.

In March 2025, ex-PNP chief Albayalde said he was preparing for a possible warrant of arrest from the ICC and would exhaust all legal remedies. 

‘Completely lacking in truth’

In a statement on Saturday, Duterte’s lead legal counsel Nicholas Kaufman said “the Prosecution has now revealed the names of what it alleges to be criminal co-perpetrators—something that we will prove to be completely lacking in truth.”

“None of these co-perpetrators are, in my opinion, currently subject to arrest warrants,” he said.

Duterte has been deemed fit to stand trial at the ICC and is expected to appear at the confirmation of charges hearing scheduled to begin on Feb. 23. 

First published in CoverStory – February 15, 2026

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DUTERTE LOSES ICC APPEAL, REMAINS IN DETENTION IN THE HAGUE

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Families of drug war victims watch livestream of the International Criminal Court’s dismissal of Rodrigo Duterte’s appeal on Wednesday, April 22. —PHOTOS BY BULLIT MARQUEZ

The Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) ruled on Wednesday that the court had jurisdiction over the case against former president Rodrigo Duterte, keeping him in detention in the Netherlands and bringing him closer to a possible trial for crimes against humanity for his brutal war on drugs in the Philippines.

The ICC may exercise jurisdiction in the Duterte case for the alleged crimes committed in the Philippines from Nov. 1, 2011, to March 16, 2019, when it was still a party to the Rome Statute, the treaty that established the court, according to the chamber’s decision.

Duterte, 81, has been detained in an ICC prison facility in The Hague since he was arrested and flown to the Dutch city on March 12, 2025. He is accused of crimes against humanity of murder for the thousands of mostly poor Filipinos summarily killed during his antidrug campaign from the time he was mayor of Davao City until the first half of his six-year term as president.

The Duterte government reported that the bloody campaign left over 6,200 dead in police operations. Human rights groups say the number was closer to 30,000.

The Appeals Chamber rejected all the arguments presented by Duterte’s lawyers that there was no legal basis for the continuation of the proceedings against him. It said that it considered his demand for “immediate and unconditional release moot.”

Rome Statute

Duterte and his lawyers contended that the Philippines was no longer a party to the Rome Statute when he was arrested in Manila and handed to the ICC in The Hague.

On March 17, 2018, Manila informed the ICC that it was withdrawing from the Rome Statute on orders of Duterte, who was angered by the initiation of an investigation of alleged extrajudicial killings in his drug war by the Office of the Prosecutor of the ICC. Under the statute, the withdrawal took effect on March 16, 2019, a year after the Duterte government’s notification.

In a statement, the ICC said the Appeals Chamber observed that the Rome Statute “must be interpreted in a systemic manner and in line with the object and purpose of the statute, which is to put an end to impunity for the perpetrators of the most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole.”

“It ruled that it would be incompatible with this object and purpose to enable a State Party to evade its responsibilities under the Statute by depositing a written notice of withdrawal once it discovers that alleged crimes committed on its territory or by its nationals are being examined by the Prosecution,” it said.

In other words, the ICC, citing the treaty itself, warns that withdrawing from the statute is not an escape route to avoid prosecution and possible conviction of crimes against humanity.

Duterte waiver

In a letter to the court two weeks earlier, Duterte waived his right to attend Wednesday’s hearing where Presiding Judge Luz del Carmen Ibáñez Carranza read a summary of the ruling of the five-member Appeals Chamber.

The announcement of the decision was received with loud cheers by family members of victims of the drug war who watched the live broadcast of the proceedings at the University of the Philippines College of Law in Quezon City, some of them in tears.

Many of them carried pictures of their slain loved ones and placards saying, “Tuloy ang Laban” (Onward with the Struggle) and “Confirm the Charges vs Duterte.” They chanted, “Duterte Panagutin” (Hold Duterte Accountable), holding up pictures of an angry Duterte.

Family members and human rights group, Karapatan, celebrate the ICC decision.

Joining the celebration was the human rights group, Karapatan, which issued a statement calling the ICC decision “a monumental victory for justice and a definitive blow against the culture of impunity.”

It said that the ICC had signaled that “justice cannot be outrun by political maneuvering and lies.”

“Today, the Appeals Chamber chose the side of the victims over the side of the perpetrators,” it said. “We remain steadfast in standing in solidarity with the victims of Duterte’s crimes. The path to justice is long, but today, it became significantly shorter.”

Confirmation of charges

After the resolution of the jurisdiction issue, the remaining ICC process prior to a possible trial, is the ruling on the confirmation of charges against Duterte, which is expected before or by the end of April.

The confirmation of charges was heard over four days last February. 

If the Pre-Trial Chamber I (PTC I) rules to confirm the charges, or a finding that there is basis to try Duterte, he will undergo a full-blown trial, which he must attend, according to court rules. A Trial Chamber will be established for this.

If PTC I decides there is not enough evidence to proceed, Duterte will be set free.

Duterte’s lead counsel, Nicholas Kaufman, said that from a legal perspective, the decision failed to clarify “the threshold for when an amorphous preliminary examination becomes a matter before the court.”

“As it would now appear, an investigation may be opened, post-withdrawal, not just one year down the line but even 20 years down the line,” he said in a statement after the ruling.

‘State-sponsored policy’

During the four-day confirmation of charges hearing, which is intended to establish “substantial grounds to believe” that Duterte committed the crimes he is accused of, the prosecution argued that the antidrug campaign was a “state-sponsored policy” to target civilians labeled as drug offenders, without due process.

The prosecutors said Duterte played a pivotal role in the killings by personally authorizing operations, hand-picking some of the victims himself. They presented his public pronouncements and declarations to “kill” suspects wantonly, creating a culture of impunity that encouraged state and non-state actors to conduct assassinations.

The defense, however, insisted that the charges were baseless and that there was no direct evidence linking Duterte’s public statements or policies to specific victims. It asserted that his prosecution was politically motivated and that the court interfered in the domestic affairs of the Philippines.

In the end Kaufman appealed for Duterte’s release on humanitarian grounds, saying that he was frail, aging and ailing.

“I tried to engage him concerning the evidence. And he lost the desire to follow me within less than a minute,” Kaufman told PTC I on Feb. 27, during the last day of the confirmation of charges hearing.

“How does the prosecution say that I did this? I’ve never murdered anyone,” he quoted Duterte as saying. “I was a faithful servant of the people, and that is how I wish to be remembered. I have now accepted my fate and I realized that I could die in prison.”

Edre U. Olalia, president of the International Association of Democratic Lawyers and chair of the National Union of People’s Lawyers, said in a message to Duterte that he could not escape from the consequences of his actions.

“You must accept the reality that you have to be accountable and that your imagined invincibility for the longest time has been shattered not by disingenuous populism nor fleeting power but by inevitable perdition,” Olalia said. CS

First published in CoverStory – April 23, 2026

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IN THE HAGUE, ICC LANDS ONE-TWO PUNCH ON RODRIGO DUTERTE LEADING TO HIS TRIAL

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Former president Rodrigo Duterte during a senate hearing in October 2024 —PHOTO FROM PNA

The International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague delivered a one-two punch to former president Rodrigo Duterte last week, nearly 10 years after he took office and unleashed his brutal “war on drugs” across the Philippines. 

The first blow landed on April 22, when the ICC Appeals Chamber upheld the October 2025 Pre-Trial Chamber I (PTC I) decision affirming the court’s jurisdiction over his case. The second came the next day, when the three-member PTC I unanimously confirmed charges that he had committed crimes against humanity.

These decisions set the stage for his trial on allegations that he was chiefly responsible for thousands of extrajudicial killings in his centerpiece anticrime program that began when he was the mayor of Davao City. The decisions were made a decade after he expanded his iron-fisted campaign from his hometown to the rest of the country when he took office as president on June 30, 2016.

The ICC presidency moved quickly to constitute the trial chamber. On April 24, it designated Nicolas Guillou of France, Joanna Korner of the United Kingdom and Keebong Paek of South Korea as members of Trial Chamber III. The announcement of the appointments was made public on April 28.

Duterte is charged with the crimes against humanity of murder and attempted murder in at least 49 incidents that victimized 78 individuals, including two mayors—Rolando Espinosa of Albuera, Leyte, and Reynaldo Parohinog of Ozamiz City—whom he had named as drug lords before they were killed.

The case against Duterte covers the period from Nov. 1, 2011, to March 16, 2019, when the Philippines was still a state party to the Rome Statute, the treaty that established the ICC.

Duterte ordered the withdrawal of the Philippines from the statute after he learned that the ICC Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) began on Feb. 8, 2018, a “preliminary examination” of extrajudicial killings in his drug war. That was less than a year after lawyer Jude Sabio submitted the first “communication,” or complaint, alleging “mass murder” in the drug war in the Philippines in April 2017. Former senator Antonio Trillanes IV and his fellow Magdalo party mate, former representative Gary  Alejano, filed a “supplemental” communication in June 2017. The National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL) submitted a communication on behalf of the families of the drug war victims in August 2018.

Despite Manila’s withdrawal from the Rome Statute, the preliminary examination continued and the official investigation of Duterte’s drug war by the OTP was authorized by the PTC I in September 2021.

Under Article 127 of the statute, a state is deemed withdrawn one year after it files a notification to withdraw. That state, however, has the duty to cooperate with “any criminal investigations and proceedings” if these involve “any matter” which is already under the ICC’s “consideration” before the withdrawal took effect.

No ‘matter’ under consideration

Duterte’s lawyers argued that when he was arrested in the Philippines and flown to The Hague in the Netherlands on March 12, 2025, and placed under ICC detention, the Philippines was no longer a state party to the statute. 

Moreover, they insisted that there wasn’t any “matter” under consideration because the OTP’s official investigation came after Manila’s withdrawal had become effective. They said the “preliminary examination” of the situation in the Philippines doesn’t qualify as a “matter” under consideration because it was an unofficial or internal process.

The Appeals Chamber rejected all the arguments of Duterte and his lawyers that there was no legal basis to continue the ICC proceedings against him and that he should be released immediately.

In its April 22 ruling, the chamber said the Rome Statute “must be interpreted in a systemic manner and in line with the object and purpose of the statute, which is to put an end to impunity for the perpetrators of the most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole.”

It ruled that the defense’s interpretation of Article 127 would be “incompatible” with the “object and purpose” of the ICC if it allows a state party to “evade its responsibilities under the Statute” by withdrawing from the treaty after it discovered that alleged crimes committed within its territory by its nationals are being examined by the prosecution.

It noted the PTC I’s conclusion that there was “a direct relationship between the Prosecutor’s announcement of the opening of the preliminary examination and the decision of the Philippines to withdraw from the Statute.”

This was the same position taken by the Philippine Supreme Court in an obiter dictum (a legal opinion that is not binding but persuasive) when it ruled to declare as “moot” a petition against Manila’s withdrawal from the Rome Statute. It was, in a way, a cautionary note by the high court to the government: that it may withdraw from the ICC, but it continues to be liable for any crimes under the tribunal’s domain while it is  still a party to the Rome Statute.

Public warning

The Appeals Chamber’s ruling on jurisdiction could also be seen as a public warning to all other state parties that withdrawing from the statute is not an escape hatch to evade prosecution.

Raul Pangalangan, a former dean of the University of the Philippines College of Law and the only Filipino so far to have served as an ICC judge, said in an interview with CoverStory in March 2025 that “ordinarily, a party may challenge jurisdiction only once.”

Duterte’s chief lawyer, Nicholas Kaufman, conceded that jurisdiction “has been settled” and that it was “the end of the road” as far as that issue was concerned. Speaking to reporters in The Hague in the presence of Duterte’s supporters, he said the former president was “stoical” after he informed him about the chamber’s decision.

Duterte’s supporters wave placards and Philippine flags during a rally on March 15, in Manila to express their support to the former president. —PHOTO BY BULLIT MARQUEZ

On April 23, the Pre-Trial Chamber confirmed all the charges against Duterte. He was found to have committed three counts of crimes against humanity—of murder in Davao involving 19 victims in nine incidents between 2013 and June 2016; of murder of “high-value targets” across the country, with 14 victims in five incidents between July 2016 and July 2017; and of murder (43 instances) and attempted murder (two instances) in 35 barangay “clearance operations” around the country between July 2016 and September 2018. 

The PTC I said Duterte allegedly committed these crimes over two distinct periods—from November 2011 to June 2016, when he served as vice mayor and mayor of Davao; and from July 2016 to March 2019, the first three years of his presidency.

The chamber said Duterte was responsible for the killings by co-perpetration, by ordering and inducing the bloody attacks, and by aiding and abetting the killings.

It identified the former president as an “indirect co-perpetrator” in his war on drugs along with at least eight alleged co-perpetrators that comprised the top tier of the organization that he headed and that directed the killings—first in Davao and later in the rest of the country. 

They included Senators Christopher “Bong” Go and Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa, a former Davao police chief and Duterte’s first Philippine National Police chief. Dela Rosa went into hiding in November 2025, after unconfirmed reports spread that the ICC had issued a warrant for his arrest. He has since been absent from Senate sessions.

Sen. Bato Dela Rosa speaks during a Senate plenary session in October 2025. —PHOTO FROM SENATE OF THE PHILIPPINES

Davao Death Squad

The PTC I cited Duterte’s own statement during an October 2024 Senate inquiry that he had organized a death squad in Davao City. The chamber said in its decision that he “sat at the top” of the hierarchy of the Davao Death Squad (DDS).

It said the killings were an “organizational policy” of the DDS during the Davao period and became a “state policy” involving a “National Network” during Duterte’s presidency.

The PTC I, citing evidence from interviews and documents from the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency and Duterte’s co-perpetrators, said the fight against drugs and criminality would be a “scaled-up version of the ‘Davao Model’ at the national level.”

Duterte and the others participated in carrying out a “common plan” to “neutralize” crime suspects, including alleged drug offenders, in a “widespread and systematic” manner, according to the PTC I. It said “neutralize” meant kill, in the context of Duterte’s drug war.

Duterte was said to have used his authority, first as mayor and later as president, to order and induce the “physical perpetrators” or the hitmen of the DDS and the National Network to launch the bloody “common plan,” locally and nationally, through a chain of command system with him at the “apex.”

“Those who did not follow orders risked being killed and were disposed of when perceived as opposing or posing a threat to the Common Plan, however insignificant,” the PTC I said.

The chamber said Duterte’s “essential contributions” to the common plan included providing manpower and logistics, such as weapons; offering financial incentives and promotions to police officers and hitmen; creating a system in which those involved in the killings were aware of protection and immunity from investigation and prosecution; and publicly identifying alleged criminals and “high-value targets.”

The number of DDS victims in Davao has been estimated at over 1,000. On May 31, 2022, a month before Duterte stepped down as president, the government’s consolidated report on drug war deaths recorded 6,252 people killed in official antidrug operations during his presidency up to that point.

Human rights groups say the number is many times higher—12,000 to 30,000—including vigilante killings and “unexplained” deaths.

Double whammy’

NUPL chair Edre Olalia was hopeful that the drug war victims’ families would get justice from the ICC’s back-to-back decisions.

“With this double whammy, there is therefore rightfully and effectively no legal impediment for [Duterte] to face the music, no matter how vexing it may sound to him,” Olalia said. “The road to concrete justice now seems less long and winding for the victims and their kin.”

The Pre-Trial Chamber said Duterte’s contributions to the drug war included his public statements “authorizing, condoning and encouraging” killings of alleged drug offenders recorded in videos, transcripts and translations of his speeches, interviews and statements. These were cited also as evidence against him during the confirmation of charges hearing.

It’s “a classic case of a ‘fish caught by its mouth’,” according to NUPL president Ephraim B. Cortez.

In an interview in The Hague reported by ANC, Kaufman said the defense team would make a request for an appeal to the PTC I as he “can’t even see one piece of evidence cited in the footnotes to justify their decision.” He said he found it “rather bizarre and strange” that the chamber “didn’t find it necessary to cite any evidence” in its 50-page decision. 

Kaufman said the reversal of the PTC I decision would be up to the same judges of the chamber. “But we have to be realistic, and we are facing a trial now,” he said.

The case against Duterte was “built on the testimony of cooperating criminal witnesses of the most vicious nature,” Kaufman said.

He said the defense would prepare to cross-examine those witnesses if the prosecution presents them — “and then we will question them and show them to be the liars that they are.” CS

Read more: Duterte loses ICC appeal, remains in detention in The Hague

First published in CoverStory – May 1, 2026

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