Senator Imee Marcos on Thursday, February 1 urged her brother President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. to clarify his administration’s stand regarding the International Criminal Court (ICC).
While the President has already stated that it would not cooperate with the ICC in any of its investigations regarding former president Rodrigo Duterte’s campaign against illegal drugs, this should be clear with all the agencies concerned.
“Let’s have the DOJ (Department of Justice), and all their employees, undersecretaries and what have you, echo the President’s message that there should be an end to this,” Marcos said in an interview over ANC’s Headstart.
“This should be clear. Government can’t go rouge and everyone is just saying different things. It is most confusing for us and most of all for foreign investment,” she pointed out.
The senator further explained that the business community do not like unpredictability and unreliability or “any changes that come from nowhere.”
“Magalit ka na Bongbong, ilang beses ko na sinabi iyan. Magwala ka na. Mabait ka masyado pero kapag ang isang tao ay mabait hindi naman dapat sinasamantala di ba (Get angry Bongbong, I've said that many times. You are very kind, but when someone is kind, you shouldn't be taken advantage of, right)?” she pointed out.
The senator said she is confused by the stand of the Marcos administration as well as the actions of the DOJ, which welcome the ICC probers as observers in the country.
“Nalalabuan ako eh, gusto ko talaga marinig kung ano eh (I’m really confused, that’s why I want to hear it myself),” she said.
“The entry of the ICC is a real affront to our judiciary, to our justice system and to our sovereignty as a nation. I think we should oppose it with every bone in our body,” the lawmaker reiterated.
Talks about the ICC earlier resurfaced after former senator Antonio Trillanes IV disclosed that ICC investigators have already gathered evidences against the Duterte administration’s war on drugs.
Trillanes also claimed that an arrest warrant against the former president and other personalities involved in the case, including Sen. Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa, may be out soon.