For four days last week, the Rappler newsroom relived the trauma of the Duterte years — as prosecutors at the International Criminal Court (ICC) played old videos from the heyday of the detained former president, when, through his words, he harassed, maimed, or killed his enemies.
It was upsetting to hear him all over again, but cathartic. Rodrigo Duterte’s own words are now being used against him at the ICC, which held pre-trial hearings on the crimes against humanity case filed against him by victims of extrajudicial killings in his drug war.
Here are the highlights from the trial:
Day 1: Both sides present two warring narratives about Duterte and his war on drugs.
Day 2: The prosecution cites significant details about the quality of their insider witnesses.
Day 3: The defense gives a preview of their core legal theory: that there’s no direct link between him and the killings, which may have been random.
Day 4: Both sides wrap up their main arguments. It’s a lot of hearsay and conjecture, says the defense. No doubt we have a strong case, says the prosecution.
The unprecedented ICC trial of a former president in Asia reminds the world that leaders can be held to explain and account for their actions, however imperfect the process is.
This is critical within the context of the US-Israel airstrikes on Iran over the weekend, which killed civilians and is yet again upending a global order that is already broken and gasping for air.
The attacks happened within a domestic context that favored American intervention: unyielding protests against civilian and religious leaders in Iran that prompted extreme measures from the state, including shutting off the internet, against the backdrop of years of US and Israel surveillance and targeted strikes.
At the start of the year, US President Donald Trump threatened to come to the aid of the protesters. “We are locked and loaded and ready to go,” Trump said in January.
It wasn’t a bluff, and Filipinos know very well how bluster can turn into policy, how bombast can maim and kill. This was in full show at The Hague last week, when ICC prosecutors drew a connection between Duterte’s words and the blood that spilled in shanty towns when he was mayor of Davao and president from 2016-2022.
Outside the halls of the ICC in The Hague, the Duterte universe flooded social media and chat groups with lies and reports that cast doubt on the integrity of the proceedings and the institution itself.
Here are some of Rappler’s bests that you shouldn’t miss:
Round 2: House begins impeachment proceedings against Sara Duterte
Lotilla exits Marcos Cabinet, Cuna is acting DENR chief
Alex Eala advances directly to second round of Indian Wells Open
Meet the man who visited the Philippines’ 1,642 cities, municipalities
How an Ilokano Tan-ok dancer got immortalized on a commemorative P100 coin
– Rappler.com
Rappler’s Best is a weekly Rappler+ exclusive newsletter of our top picks delivered straight to your inbox every Monday. Visit rappler.com/newsletters to subscribe.
The views expressed by the writer are his/her own and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of Rappler.


