Gintawag nga politically motivated ni Rep. Paolo Duterte ang confirmation of charges hearing sang International Criminal Court batuk sa iya amay nga si President Rodrigo Duterte.
“Kung justice talaga ang hanap nila, sana una nilang tanungin—may hurisdiksyon ba kayo?,” suno kay Rep. Duterte.
Pahayag niya, nag-withdraw na ang Pilipinas sa ICC kag indi dapat pag balewalaon ang soberanya sang pungsod.
Dugang pa niya, indi patas nga ang mga sadto nga administrasyon nga may mga kaangay nga insidente ang wala gin-imbestigaran magluwas lang gid sa iya amay.
“This hearing will not change history. It will not erase the mandate given by the Filipino people,” pahayag pa ni Rep. Duterte.
STATEMENT OF REP. Paolo Duterte
On the ICC “Confirmation of Charges” Hearing vs. FPRRD (Feb. 23–28)
Starting February 23–28, the International Criminal Court will once more pretend it is dispensing justice—this time through a so-called “confirmation of charges” hearing against former President Rodrigo Roa Duterte.
Kung justice talaga ang hanap nila, sana una nilang tanungin—may hurisdiksyon ba kayo?
Because last time we checked, the Philippines already left the Rome Statute. But apparently, sa ICC, optional lang ang sovereignty—depende kung sino ang target.
Di ko mutuo anang ICC, kay klaro kaayong politika nga korte.
Pangalawa, kung may hurisdiksyon man kayo, crimes against humanity na pala ang pagsugpo ng kriminalidad sa sariling bayan?
Independent kuno—but funny how the targets are always leaders who refuse to bow, refuse to be lectured, and refuse to play nice with Western interests.
Under whose supervision? Well, people can draw their own conclusions.
Nakakatawa pa, they claim to speak for “victims,” pero they completely ignore the millions of Filipinos who finally felt safe when crime, drugs, and lawlessness were confronted head-on. Those victims don’t count, apparently. Hindi sila pasok sa narrative.
And let’s talk about double standards.
Ang mga Aquino, namusil ug mga mag-uuma kay gusto lang nilang i-reclaim ang ilang yuta sa ilang Hacienda.
Pero si PRRD, allegations na may namatay na mga drug pushers under his watch —dayon “crimes against humanity” na?
Tan-awa ang Mexico karon. Tan-awa unsa kagubot kung ang estado mahadlok mo-atubang sa kriminalidad.
Let’s call this what it is—not justice, not accountability, but selective prosecution dressed up as moral superiority.
Former President Duterte did not govern for foreign approval. He governed for Filipinos—especially those who lived in fear long before air-conditioned courtrooms started moralizing from thousands of kilometers away.
This hearing will not change history.
It will not erase the mandate given by the Filipino people. And it certainly will not intimidate those of us who know the difference between rule of law and rule by foreign pressure.
So yes, they may hold their hearings.
They may read their scripts.
They may pat their backs and congratulate themselves.
But here at home, we know one thing clearly—
Philippine sovereignty is not up for confirmation.
Ug sa tanang Duterte supporters, kabalo mo: HOSTAGE AKONG AMAHAN sa kandidatura sa akong igsuon. US–CIA? No way. All the way.
COC pod amo hulat. Certificate of Candidacy. Bye, NGAG.











