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OSG hammers Bato fugitive: Marcos must stop spectating

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May 19, 2026 · 1:07 AM
OSG hammers Bato fugitive: Marcos must stop spectating

OSG hammers Bato fugitive: Marcos must stop spectating - Manila Standard

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OpinionColumnsCitizen Barok by Louis Barok Biraogo

Last updated May 18, 2026, 10:22 PM

OSG hammers Bato fugitive: Marcos must stop spectating

ByLouis 'Barok' Biraogo

May 19, 2026, 12:06 AM

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Estimated reading time: 4 minutes and 26 seconds

“In language both clinical and merciless, the OSG has branded Dela Rosa a fugitive from justice”

A SITTING senator, once the iron-fisted chief of the Philippine National Police, now plays the role of a man on the run.

Ronald “Bato” Dela Rosa stands accused by the International Criminal Court of crimes against humanity for his central role in the bloody drug war.

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Instead of facing the warrant with dignity, he has chosen evasion — slipping out of the Senate under cover of night after a convenient “protective custody” arrangement that existed only in the fertile imagination of its author.

The Office of the Solicitor General has responded with a devastating 83-page legal broadside that should end this farce once and for all.

In language both clinical and merciless, the OSG has branded Dela Rosa a fugitive from justice.

His public defiance, his wife’s candid admission that he “escaped,” his counsel’s refusal to disclose his whereabouts — all of it, the government’s chief lawyer argues, slams the courthouse doors shut under the fugitive disentitlement doctrine.

A man cannot mock the judicial process by day and then run to the same courts for protection by night.

This is no mere procedural skirmish. It is a defining test of whether the Philippines still believes that no one — not even a senator with a badge and a body count — stands above the law.

The OSG’s position is not only correct; it is Constitutionally unassailable.

Grounded in Article II, Section 2 of the 1987 Constitution, which incorporates generally accepted principles of international law into our domestic order, the government correctly notes that obligations incurred while we were a party to the Rome Statute do not vanish upon withdrawal.

The killings at issue happened between 2016 and 2019, when the Philippines was fully bound.

Republic Act 9851, our own law on international crimes, further authorizes cooperation with the ICC and makes clear that its warrants do not require a separate Philippine court order for enforcement.

Dela Rosa’s arguments crumble under scrutiny.

His cry of due process rings hollow for a man who has repeatedly invoked the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction while simultaneously evading it.

His sovereignty defense is a legal relic, long superseded by our own statutes and treaties.

The clean-hands doctrine — that ancient equitable principle requiring those who seek the court’s mercy to approach with clean hands — was made for precisely this moment.

As the Supreme Court held in People v. Mapalao, an accused who flees loses standing to demand relief until he submits to the law’s authority. Dela Rosa’s own conduct has written his disqualification.

Yet the deeper scandal lies not in the Senate corridors but in Malacañang.

This entire embarrassing spectacle exists because President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has chosen spectatorship over leadership.

While a senator plays hide-and-seek with an international arrest warrant, the President remains silent.

The OSG has been forced to become the spine of the state precisely because the man elected to lead it has none.

Marcos allows the Senate to invent Constitutional fictions like “protective custody,” permits immigration lookouts to be issued yet never enforced with real urgency, and watches the drama unfold as if it were mere entertainment rather than a direct challenge to the rule of law.

This is governance by absence — a dangerous vacuum where political calculation has replaced moral courage.

Marcos, ever the careful triangulator, seems content to let the ICC do the heavy lifting against his rivals’ allies while maintaining plausible deniability at home.

The result is a nation held hostage to a distracting soap opera of elite impunity while the poor, who have no Senate chambers to hide in and no lawyers to spin their evasions, continue to bear the real costs of weak leadership.

The Supreme Court now faces a historic choice. It must dismiss Dela Rosa’s petition outright and deny any temporary restraining order.

Judicial relief is a privilege, not a sanctuary for fugitives.

A senator who escapes custody, conceals his location, and defies lawful process cannot be allowed to weaponize the courts against the very system he scorns.

The time for half-measures is over.

The Executive must move decisively to enforce the warrant through proper channels under our laws.

The Senate must be reminded, in the bluntest terms, that it is a co-equal branch of government, not a safe house for the accused.

Dela Rosa’s counsel should face serious ethical scrutiny for facilitating what appears to be evasion while litigating before the very court being evaded.

This case is larger than one man. It is about whether international accountability for the worst crimes can pierce the armor of Philippine political power.

It is about whether the rule of law remains a living principle or merely expensive theater for the powerful.

The victims’ families — thousands of them — have waited long enough.

The nation cannot afford another week of this national embarrassment while real problems crush ordinary Filipinos.

The law waits for no fugitive, no matter how many stars he once wore on his shoulder.

Justice, however delayed by clever lawyering and political patronage, is patient. But it is also relentless.

The Supreme Court must now prove that in this Republic, the law still bites — even when the accused wears a barong and carries a Senate ID.

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