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ICC starts hearing if Duterte should be tried for crimes against humanity

24 February 2026

 

Videos shown by prosecutors to support case against Duterte

Videos showing detained former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte declaring he wanted drug lords and other criminals killed were played at the International Criminal Court, as prosecutors argued why he should be put on trial for the three charges of crimes against humanity filed against him.

Duterte waived his right to attend the pre-trial hearings, telling the judges in a letter that he did not recognize the court’s jurisdiction and that he is “old, tired and frail.” He also applied to skip the annual hearing on his detention set for Friday.

The former strongman who ruled the Philippines from 2016 to 2022 faces three counts of crimes against humanity for murder and attempted murder, covering 49 incidents and at least 76 victims during his tenure as Davao City mayor and later as president.

Nicholls (with glasses) presents evidence against Duterte

After the prosecution, the defense and the victims’ lawyers made their opening statements, Senior Trial Lawyer Julian Nicholls detailed evidence which he said established that Duterte founded the Davao Death Squad (DDS) and used this so-called Davao model to carry out killings during his term as president.

Nicholls said the model uses a chain of command with Duterte on top and extends to co-perpetrators, DDS handlers, and down to a number of members of carried out the killings.

DETAILS HERE

“Mr. Duterte created liquidation squads, death squads made up of both Davao City police officers as well as non-police officers who essentially hired hitmen and hired killers," Nicholls said. 

This, he argued, was contrary to what lead defence counsel Nicholas Kaufman had claimed in his opening statement that Duterte was bent on using hyperbole in his statements, and that he only declared a war on crime in a legal way.

"The Davao Model was murder, not being tough on crime legally as my friend (Kaufman) said," Nicholls added.

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To establish the prosecution’s case, Nicholls referred to a number of witness statements from self-proclaimed DDS members as well as a number of videos showing Duterte admitting the existence of the group, and repeatedly saying he did not only order the killings but even did some of it himself.

One of the videos showed Duterte saying in an ambush interview in December 2015 that a human rights group was wrong in saying he had killed 700 people in Davao City when he was mayor. Duterte said the group had undercounted because the actual number was 1,700.

"Not only did Mr. Duterte clearly intend his criminality, he openly bragged about it. Right up until his arrest, he bragged about it. He thrives on a tough guy persona or image that he's tried to create for himself," Nicholls said.

The ICC judges presiding over the confirmation hearing

In November 2015, while campaigning for the presidency, he told a press conference that he would cite Davao as “exhibit A” if asked for his credentials. He then added, “Either I get what I want, or you perish. Let’s be straightforward. What does that mean? That means killings.”

Four other clips from Duterte’s presidential campaign also showed him vowing to get criminals killed. In one of them, he said in his weekly talk show that if elected president he would kill anyone who makes the lives of Filipinos miserable.

Among the witness statements he presented was one executed by a former DDS member who said the group was formed in 1988 during a dinner meeting in Davao City where Duterte was present.

Basahin ang detalye!

“He openly told new members of the death squad he was forming that their job was to kill criminals,” Nicholls said.

Another witness said Duterte never mentioned self-defence as a ground for shooting suspected criminals, and even personally armed new DDS members with handguns and ammunitions which were in a basket that was passed around during the party.

The prosecution also presented a slide showing five individuals named in the charge sheet as Duterte’s co-perpetrators in his bloody anti-crime drive in Davao City, including incumbent Senators Ronald "Bato” dela Rosa and Christopher “Bong” Go.

The others were identified as former Davao City police chief Vicente Danao, former National Bureau of Investigation chief in Davao Dante Gierran, and former Secretar of Justice Vitaliano Aguirre II.

Kaufman, as lead counsel for Duterte, said in his opening statement that the tough-talking leader was fond of using hyperbole and had exaggerated his public promises of killings to scare criminals.

He accused the prosecution of “cherry picking” speeches to show Duterte in a bad light, and ignored his more temperate pronouncements.

Kaufman echoed claims from Duterte supporters that the charges against the former leader were politically motivated, and even went as far as directly accusing President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr of engineering his predecessor’s arrest.

The president said through his spokesperson that the arrest was lawful, and that the complaint with the ICC was filed in 2017 when Duterte was still president.

The hearings will continue until Feb 27, and a decision is expected within two months. If the charges are confirmed, the case will proceed to trial which, judging from previous ICC cases, would not likely start until after five years.

 

 

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