How to stop Trillanes attacks vs Duterte? ‘Kill me or isolate me’

Camille Elemia

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

How to stop Trillanes attacks vs Duterte? ‘Kill me or isolate me’
'I don't fear death per se. It’s just one of the scenarios that they have and in fact we already validated that a few times – that Duterte really wants me killed,' Senator Antonio Trillanes IV tells Rappler

MANILA, Philippines – Opposition Senator Antonio Trillanes IV said only death and isolation can stop his criticisms against President Rodrigo Duterte.

“Probably they’ll have to put me away physically – either killing me or isolating me from the rest of the world,” Trillanes said in a Rappler Talk interview on Friday, September 14, when asked what would make him cease going against the President.

Trillanes said he was not afraid of death, as he again claimed that the President wanted him dead.

“I don’t fear death per se. It’s just one of the scenarios that they have and in fact we already validated that a few times – that Duterte really wants me killed. So it’s there on their table of options to get rid of somebody like me,” Trillanes said.

The opposition senator said he had been asked several times why he was a fierce Duterte critic and he always had the same answer.

“It’s really quite easy to just pledge your support to somebody like Duterte and have an easy life, right? For some reason, I can’t just do that. There’s this inner sense of duty to do what I’m doing,” he said.

The senator is one of the most consistent and fiercest critics of Duterte since the 2016 campaign, and had since accused the President and his family of amassing billions in illegal wealth. The Dutertes had repeatedly denied this.

Trillanes repeatedly challenged Duterte to sign a bank waiver to allow scrutiny of his bank accounts but the latter had refused  to do so.

In June 2017, Trillanes and Magdalo Representative Gary Alejano filed before the International Criminal Court (ICC) a supplemental complaint against Duterte over the thousands of extrajudicial killings brought about by Duterte’s drug war.

The ICC, born out of the Rome Statute, is an intergovernmental and international tribunal which investigates genocides, war crimes, and crimes against humanity.

The ICC started “preliminary examinations” to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to establish that the case against Duterte would fall under its jurisdiction. In response, Duterte withdrew the Philippines from the treaty – the subject of oral arguments in the Supreme Court.

Duterte issued Proclamation 572, ordering the revocation of the amnesty that  then-president Benigno Aquino III  granted to Trillanes in 2011. 

Duterte also initially ordered the Armed Forces of the Philippines and the Philippine National Police to immediately arrest the senator even without a warrant. They, however,  changed their tune and said they would defer to civilian courts.

Trillanes questioned  Duterte’s order before the SC. The SC denied  the senator’s request for immediate relief via a temporary restraining order but asked the Office of the Solicitor General to respond to the senator’s main petition.  (READ: EXPLAINER: What the Supreme Court TRO denial means for Trillanes)

Trillanes has been holed up in his Senate office for more than a week now, as two Makati City Regional Trial Courts have yet to act on the justice department’s requests for arrest warrants against him. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!
Face, Person, Human

author

Camille Elemia

Camille Elemia is a former multimedia reporter for Rappler. She covered media and disinformation, the Senate, the Office of the President, and politics.