logo
Philippines Vice President Sara Duterte agrees with poll: She should be tried

Philippines Vice President Sara Duterte agrees with poll: She should be tried

The Star5 days ago

MANILA: Vice President Sara Duterte (pic) said she agreed with an overwhelming majority of Filipinos that she should be tried by an impeachment court for corruption and other high crimes, but she has not withdrawn her petition in the Supreme Court questioning her impeachment.
'Oh, I totally agree,' she said of the results of a recent Social Weather Stations (SWS) poll that she should be tried by the Senate after she was impeached by the House of Representatives on Feb. 5.
'I'm among those 88 per cent who say that,' she told reporters and supporters on Friday (May 30) outside the International Criminal Court detention center in The Hague, the Netherlands, where her father, ex-President Rodrigo Duterte, is being held.
Her office provided the media in the Philippines with a copy of the video interview with her.
'I'm thankful for the opportunity to clear my name and answer the accusations against me,' Duterte said.
The impeachment complaint accuses her of culpable violation of the Constitution, bribery, graft and corruption, and betrayal of public trust for, among others, her alleged misuse of more than P612 million (US$110 million) in confidential funds and for her alleged threat to assassinate President Marcos, first lady Liza Araneta Marcos and Speaker Martin Romualdez.
She spoke in The Hague on May 30, on the eve of her 47th birthday, which she planned to celebrate with her father and their supporters.
The former president is accused of murder as a crime against humanity for the thousands killed in his brutal antinarcotics campaign that he implemented as mayor of Davao City and later as president.
The May 2025 SWS survey on 'people's post-election expectations' released on Thursday, showed that 68 percent of the 1,800 respondents nationwide said that the Vice President 'definitely should address the impeachment charges, answer all allegations pertaining to corruption and clear her name.' It showed that 20 per cent said that she 'probably should' do the same.
Only four per cent said that Duterte 'probably should not' and three per cent said she 'definitely should not,' results of the survey showed. Four per cent were unsure what to say.
The poll also saw a consensus that Duterte should focus more on her work as Vice President and minimise any politically driven activities.
Asked to comment on the deferment of the start of the impeachment trial to June 11 instead of June 2, when the Congress resumes session, Duterte said she saw no impact of the delay on her case, but would leave it to her lawyers to study the developments further.
Also in the Netherlands was Sen. Imee Marcos, the eldest sister of President Marcos.
Duterte had a bitter falling out with Marcos, unraveling their formidable UniTeam that swept the 2022 national elections.
Marcos said on his inaugural BBM Podcast that he was willing to reconcile with the Dutertes because he needed more friends than enemies.
'I probably won't talk about reconciliation because people's personal problems aren't important. What's more important is our people and our country,' Duterte said in response to his remarks.
She said the President's sister, whose reelection she supported in the recent midterm polls, was in The Hague to speak with her father's lawyer, Nicholas Kaufman.
'Whatever it is they talked about, I have nothing to do with it anymore,' she said.
The Vice President and her mother, Elizabeth Zimmerman Duterte, were able to see her father for a 'prebirthday' celebration. A 'send Duterte home' rally is scheduled to take place outside the detention center on her birthday on Saturday.
She earlier said she was eager to see the trial through because she wanted a 'bloodbath.' She did not elaborate on what she meant.
While Duterte committed to face the charges against her in the impeachment court, she did not say anything about the petition she filed on Feb. 18 in the Supreme Court questioning the constitutionality of the impeachment process.
Duterte accused the House of Representatives and its secretary general, Reginald Velasco, of withholding the first three complaints against her allegedly to circumvent the one-year ban on the filing of more than one complaint against an impeachable official.
She said that the House only acted on the fourth complaint, which was signed by 215 of around 300 members of the chamber. The fourth petition, however, contained essentially the same charges against her in the three others.
'This political stratagem was done at the expense of constitutional standards … with the ultimate goal of having the petitioner perpetually disqualified from running for any national elective office,' she said in her petition.
Duterte is a probable contender in the May 2028 presidential election.
Another petition was filed just hours after her own petition by several of her supporters. They asked the Supreme Court to stop the Senate from convening into an impeachment court.
Senior Deputy Speaker Aurelio Gonzales Jr. said then that Duterte and the other petitioners were 'running scared … perhaps the allegations of corruption are true.'
Deputy Speaker David Suarez of Quezon said Duterte's move 'reeks of panic and a blatant effort to undermine the impeachment process even before it formally begins.'
ACT Teachers Rep. France Castro criticised Duterte for flying to the Netherlands to celebrate 'with more lies and political theatrics' instead of reflecting on her actions ahead of her impeachment trial.
'The Filipino people deserve transparency, not squid tactics,' Castro said.
'On her birthday, we challenge VP Duterte to choose truth over deception, accountability over evasion. The impeachment process is constitutional and legitimate—she should respect it instead of undermining it with her desperate antics,' the lawmaker said.
Other ACT leaders slammed the fresh delay in the start of the impeachment trial, which they called a 'calculated scheme' to quash the proceedings altogether.
ACT Representative-elect Antonio Tinio said the delay signals an attempt to 'kill the impeachment trial through procedural maneuvering rather than addressing the serious charges on their merits.'
He said that the 'delaying tactics make a mockery of our democratic institutions and constitutional processes.'
'If impeachment proceedings can be killed through procedural technicalities and political alignments, then no high official will ever be held accountable for corruption and abuse of power,' Tinio said.
He was particularly concerned about how the delay strategy 'was seemingly being orchestrated across party lines,' noting that Marcos himself again publicly expressed his opposition to the trial. - Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cambodia's bold pledge to eliminate plastic pollution
Cambodia's bold pledge to eliminate plastic pollution

The Star

time2 hours ago

  • The Star

Cambodia's bold pledge to eliminate plastic pollution

Students in a school in Phnom Penh supporting the no plastic pledge programme. - Photo: Phnom Penh Post/ANN PHNOM PENH (Bernama): Cambodia has reaffirmed its strong commitment to eradicating plastic pollution by launching nationwide campaigns that have mobilised millions in the fight against environmental degradation. The pledge came two months ahead of global treaty negotiations, where countries will convene to develop a legally binding agreement to end plastic pollution. Environment Minister Eang Sophalleth said the government's "Clean Land' policy, along with campaigns such as "Today, I Don't Use Plastic Bags' and "Plastic-Free National Roads,' aims to curb plastic waste, improve public sanitation, and foster a culture of environmental responsibility, reported Fresh News. "The initiatives have encouraged widespread public involvement in reducing plastic use and cleaning up environments across households, communities, public spaces, and national highways. "As of April 21, 2025, more than 11 million individuals, including citizens, monks, and relevant stakeholders, have pledged not to use plastic bags. Over six million individuals have joined the campaigns,' Sophalleth said at the National Environment Day and World Environment Day celebrations held on Thursday. The second part of the fifth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee to create an international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution, including the marine environment, will take place from August 5 to 14 in Switzerland. Cambodia continues to grapple with mounting plastic waste challenges, as its growing population, rapid economic growth, and urbanisation have significantly increased the use of non-degradable plastics in everyday life. United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in his World Environment Day message that plastic pollution is choking the planet - harming ecosystems and the climate. "Plastic waste clogs rivers, pollutes the ocean and endangers wildlife. In two months, countries will come together to hammer out a new global treaty to end plastic pollution. "We need an ambitious, credible and just agreement this year. One that covers the life-cycle of plastic, through the perspective of circular economies,' he said. World Environment Day is marked globally on June 5, and this year's theme is "Beat Plastic Pollution'. The United Nations Environment Programme estimated that 11 million tonnes of plastic waste leak into aquatic ecosystems each year, while microplastics accumulate in the soil from sewage and landfills, due to the use of plastics in agricultural packaging. The annual social and environmental cost of plastic pollution ranges between RM1.2 trillion to RM2.4 trillion (US$300 billion and US$600 billion). - Bernama World Environment Day, Cambodia, United Nations, Antonio Guterres, Ministry of Environment

Most Petronas workers to be retrenched are on contract, says Prime Minister
Most Petronas workers to be retrenched are on contract, says Prime Minister

Daily Express

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Express

Most Petronas workers to be retrenched are on contract, says Prime Minister

Published on: Friday, June 06, 2025 Published on: Fri, Jun 06, 2025 By: Mohamad Fadli, FMT Text Size: Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said he will contact his Thai counterpart, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, this afternoon to discuss the Thai-Cambodia border dispute. (Bernama pic) PETALING JAYA: Most of those to be retrenched in the impending 10% cut to Petronas's workforce are contract workers, says Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. 'Most of them are on contract,' he told reporters briefly in Dengkil, Selangor, today. Advertisement He was asked to comment on the national oil and gas company's announcement that it intends to reduce its headcount by more than 5,000 people, and to freeze hiring until December 2026. The retrenchment plan is part of a company-wide restructuring as Petronas looks to reduce costs due to falling crude prices. Petronas president and group CEO Tengku Muhammad Taufik Aziz was reported as saying yesterday that the company sets its budget based on Brent crude oil priced at around US$75 to US$80 per barrel. The global benchmark is currently trading near US$65, down about 13% this year, as trade tensions threaten global growth and OPEC+ restores production. Petronas's net income slid 32% in 2024 after a 21% drop in 2023. Separately, Anwar said he will contact Thai prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra this afternoon to discuss the Thai-Cambodia border dispute. 'We will release a statement after that,' he said. Thailand and Cambodia have seen military clashes since 2008, resulting in at least 28 deaths. The most recent occurred on May 28 when a Cambodian soldier was killed in a location known as the Emerald Triangle, a joint border area between Cambodia, Thailand and Laos. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia

Growing trend to deny burial space for Christians
Growing trend to deny burial space for Christians

Herald Malaysia

time3 hours ago

  • Herald Malaysia

Growing trend to deny burial space for Christians

Refusing burial space to Christians is becoming an alarming trend in villages across central and eastern India, particularly in the tribal regions of Chhattisgarh and Odisha. Jun 06, 2025 A file picture of Christian volunteers and workers restoring the tombs in Ambala Christian Cemetery in northern India after a court restored their burial rights in February 2021. (Photo supplied) RAIPUR, India: Refusing burial space to Christians is becoming an alarming trend in villages across central and eastern India, particularly in the tribal regions of Chhattisgarh and Odisha. Christian leaders say the practice is being used to pressure believers into abandoning their faith and to deter others from associating with Christian communities or Victor Thakur of Raipur warned that Christians of all denominations are increasingly facing this discrimination. He described it as a coordinated and deliberate strategy that needs urgent attention from Church leaders and civil society.A recent case in Havechur village, Chhattisgarh, involved the denial of burial for Ankalu Ram Potai, a 55-year-old Christian who died on May 13. Villagers, upset by his conversion decades earlier, guarded his home overnight to prevent a secret activist Arun Pannalal reported at least 15 such incidents in Chhattisgarh since 2023, while Fr Ajay Singh of Odisha documented around 10 in the past year. They believe radical Hindu groups are attempting to isolate Christians and suppress religious freedom through these local burial denied, families often transport the deceased to distant Christian cemeteries, sometimes over 80 kilometres away. In one 2025 case, the Supreme Court failed to grant burial rights to the family of Pastor Subhash Baghel, who was eventually buried 85 kilometres from his home after nearly three stressed that political and sectarian groups exploit tribal poverty and illiteracy to fuel religious divides. Thakur similarly warned of 'divide and rule' tactics and urged Christian communities to unite and engage in dialogue to counter the growing hostility. Conditions in Odisha have worsened since the BJP's 2024 return to power. In March 2025, Christians in Siunaguda village were forced to convert to bury a relative, and others have faced harassment and social exclusion. Father Singh called these acts not only discriminatory but also violations of basic constitutional and human rights. --

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store