Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s fiercest critic in Congress was arrested on Tuesday after the president revoked his 2011 amnesty for a failed coup attempt and revived rebellion charges against him in an unprecedented legal move the senator called a blow to democracy.
Philippine Senator Antonio Trillanes IV walked out of the Senate, where he had taken refuge for weeks, and was moved by police to their headquarters in Makati City, where his fingerprints and mugshot were taken.
After being booked by police, Trillanes was escorted to a nearby court and posted bail, trailed by many journalists.
Photo: Reuters
“Democracy lost today,” Trillanes told reporters shortly before his arrest.
“Darkness and evil prevailed in our country. Whatever happens in the future will be in the hands of the Filipino people,” he said.
After posting bail, he returned to the Senate to hold a news conference.
“We expect other forms of harassment in the days to come,” he said, adding that he expected the worst.
Known for outbursts against his critics, Duterte has long expressed anger against Trillanes, who has accused him of large-scale corruption, involvement in illegal drugs and extrajudicial killings in an anti-drug crackdown that has left thousands of suspects dead since he took office in 2016.
Duterte has denied the allegations.
Trillanes, a former navy officer, was jailed for more than seven years for involvement in at least three army uprisings, including a 2003 mutiny against then-Philippine president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo when he and other young officers rigged part of a road in the Makati financial district with bombs and took over an upscale residential building.
After being amnestied under Duterte’s predecessor, Benigno Aquino III, Trillanes successfully petitioned two Philippine courts to dismiss rebellion and coup cases, allowing him to later run for public office.
Duterte said he voided Trillanes’ amnesty last month because the senator had failed to file a formal amnesty request and acknowledge guilt.
Trillanes has strongly denied the president’s claims and has provided news reports and defense department documents to counter them.
The Philippine Department of Justice has asked two courts to issue warrants for Trillanes’ arrest and resume criminal proceedings against him.
One of the courts issued the arrest warrant on Tuesday.
Aside from the rebellion and coup-related charges in the two courts, Duterte has also ordered the military to resume an inquiry into the senator’s role in the mutinies.
Legal experts and the Integrated Bar of the Philippines, the nation’s largest lawyers’ group, have expressed alarm over the legal moves against Trillanes for offenses that were canceled by the 2011 amnesty.
The lawyers’ group said the move “runs roughshod over the constitutional guarantee against double jeopardy,” or holding a person to answer twice for the same offense.
Duterte has also accused Trillanes, without offering evidence, of plotting with other opposition politicians, including the Liberal Party and leftist groups, to oust him.
Trillanes and opposition groups have dismissed the claim as a lie and asked Duterte to focus instead on addressing poverty, inflation, rice shortages, traffic jams and a decline in the value of the Philippine peso.
Human Rights Watch said Trillanes’ arrest “is part of the persecution of critics of the Duterte administration, the latest in the relentless campaign to silence those who dared to challenge the president’s murderous ‘drug war.’”
“Trillanes’ arrest today [Tuesday] sends a chilling effect among other critics of the Duterte administration,” said Carlos Conde, a researcher at the rights group’s Asia office.
Trillanes has backed several complaints to the International Criminal Court seeking Duterte’s indictment for crimes against humanity and has also protected people who have been willing to testify against the president.
Additional reporting by Reuters
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