MANILA, (PNA)
-- Chief Justice Maria Lourdes P. Aranal Sereno accepted on Friday the apology
made by President Rodrigo R. Duterte during a press conference after meeting
with first Filipina Olympic silver medalist Hidilyn Diaz in Panacan, Davao City
Thursday night.
”The Chief
Justice appreciates the President’s latest remarks. As previously announced,
she will no longer say anything on this matter,” Sereno said in a statement on
Friday read for her by SC Public Information Office (PIO) Chief and Spokesman
Atty. Theodore O. Te.
This was the
reaction of the SC on the apology of President Duterte saying that the harsh
words he has uttered against the Chief Justice were only brought about by the
big problems of the country that he is currently dealing with.
In his speech
on Tuesday, President Duterte said that the Chief Justice should not create a
constitutional crisis which may prompt the President to order everybody in the
Executive Department not to honor the orders of the Chief Justice to the
Executive Department.
President
Duterte also warned the Chief Justice not to impede on the government’s all-out
war against illegal drugs, otherwise, he would rather declare Martial Law.
Sereno on
Monday advised the judges who were named by President Duterte as purportedly
involved in illegal drugs not to surrender.
In her
four-page letter to President Duterte sent through Department of Justice (DOJ)
Secretary Vitaliano N. Aguirre II, the Chief Magistrate advised the judges who
were included in the list not to surrender to any police officer without a
warrant of arrest.
Sereno said
that this was to protect the judges as the protectors of the rights of the
citizens under the Constitution.
Sereno also
asked President Duterte to allow those judges who were named to continue to
carry their licensed firearms for as long as charges are not yet filed against
them.
This as
Sereno expressed her apprehension that the said judges will also be the
“target” of incidents of extra-judicial killings and that they may also become
“collateral damage” in the war against illegal drugs.
The SC had
previously asked the Philippine National Police (PNP) to allow the judges to
carry firearm since the SC has no sufficient personnel to provide protection to
the judges.
Sereno added that
although the judiciary appreciates the intention of the President to help in
the clean-up of the ranks of the judiciary, the informal report from the
President or the members of his Cabinet would be sufficient enough for the SC
to take action and conduct an investigation without the need of ordering the
judges to report to any office and thereby not impede in their scheduled court
activities. (PNA/with report by: Perfecto T. Raymundo Jr.)(posted by: Becky D. de Asis)
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