*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM
I have always believed that one of the strangest realities in public life is how memory works differently for politicians and for documents. Human beings forget selectively. Political camps forget strategically. Loyalists forget emotionally. But official records do not forget at all. I remember many years ago sitting in a governance conversation where a public official, with chest out and voice full of certainty, declared that his institution needed no outside help. Kaya raw nilang resolbahin ang sarili nilang problema. The tone was patriotic, sovereign, and even admirable if one were to judge merely by confidence alone. But months later, when difficult questions began surfacing, when accountability started knocking, and when scrutiny became politically uncomfortable, the same institutional tone changed. Suddenly the narrative was about persecution. Suddenly scrutiny became interference. Suddenly difficult questions became framed as political attacks. That moment taught me something profound. Declarations are easy when consequences remain theoretical. Consistency becomes difficult when history begins asking for receipts. That is precisely why the present national debate involving the International Criminal Court, the Philippine withdrawal from the Rome Statute, the continuing discussions surrounding accountability for alleged crimes against humanity, and the institutional role of Alan Peter Cayetano remain deeply compelling. This is no longer merely a legal issue. Hindi na ito simpleng constitutional debate lamang. This has become a case study in political memory, legal continuity, sovereignty, and institutional sincerity.
One of the great tragedies of modern political discourse is how serious legal questions are reduced to emotional tribal warfare. Para bang pinipilit ang publiko na mamili lamang sa dalawang simplistikong naratibo. Either the ICC is absolutely powerless because the Philippines already withdrew, or international institutions can simply bulldoze Philippine sovereignty without restraint. Parehong intellectually lazy ang ganitong framing. Serious law does not operate through slogans. Constitutional interpretation does not emerge from social media tantrums. International treaty obligations do not disappear because someone shouts loudly enough in a press conference. The law, unlike politics, is patient. And patient institutions often become the most dangerous because they wait, they document, and they remember.
Let us begin with legal facts rather than emotional noise. The Philippines deposited its notice of withdrawal from the Rome Statute in 2018, with that withdrawal formally taking effect in March 2019 pursuant to Article 127 of the Rome Statute. Mahalaga ang detalyeng ito because many political commentators speak as though the mere act of withdrawal instantly erased all legal consequences, all obligations, and all historical accountability. Hindi ganoon gumagana ang treaty law. International legal obligations do not behave like a canceled mobile subscription. The withdrawal timeline matters because obligations arising during membership do not automatically vanish simply because a state later chooses to exit. But timing alone is only one part of the bigger story. The more fascinating issue lies in how the Philippine government itself explained that withdrawal to the international community.
This is where the national conversation becomes politically awkward. Contrary to the simplistic narrative now weaponized by some political actors, the Duterte administration never officially presented withdrawal as a declaration of immunity. Hindi sinabi ng gobyerno noon na aalis tayo para walang puwedeng managot. Hindi nila sinabi na withdrawal means complete legal invisibility. Instead, the diplomatic message was far more sophisticated and, frankly, far more dangerous in its long-term implications. The Philippines essentially told the world that continued ICC membership was unnecessary because the country already possessed functioning domestic legal institutions capable of prosecuting atrocity crimes. In simpler terms, the sovereign argument was this: trust our justice system, trust our laws, trust our institutions, because the Philippines can handle accountability on its own.
At the center of that argument stood Republic Act No. 9851. This deserves serious discussion because too many political debates conveniently ignore it. Republic Act No. 9851, officially enacted on December 11, 2009 under the administration of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, is formally titled the Philippine Act on Crimes Against International Humanitarian Law, Genocide, and Other Crimes Against Humanity. Let that sink in. This is not a foreign imposition. This is not a legal invention of the opposition. Hindi ito gawa ng ICC. Hindi ito imported political weapon crafted to attack any contemporary political personality. This is Philippine law, enacted through sovereign legislative processes, approved by Philippine lawmakers, and signed into existence by Philippine constitutional authority. Sa madaling salita, mismong Republika ng Pilipinas ang nagsabi na crimes against humanity are real legal categories deserving prosecution.
That fact alone significantly weakens the lazy political claim that accountability discussions involving crimes against humanity are merely foreign interference. If our own legislature, acting under sovereign constitutional authority, recognized these crimes as prosecutable realities, then how can the conversation suddenly be framed as a purely imported political assault? RA 9851 matters not merely because of its statutory provisions but because of what it symbolizes. It reflects a mature sovereign state acknowledging that sovereignty and accountability are not enemies. In fact, they are supposed to strengthen one another.
This is where the word "sovereignty" must be rescued from political misuse. In contemporary political rhetoric, sovereignty is often invoked as though it were some magical shield against all scrutiny. A word shouted loudly enough to make accountability disappear. But serious constitutional thought does not define sovereignty that way. Sovereignty is not immunity. Hindi ito simpleng kami ang estado kaya bawal ninyo kaming tanungin. Sovereignty is not merely freedom from foreign interference. It is institutional responsibility. It is competence. It is the ability of a state to govern itself with legitimacy, seriousness, and justice. Ang tunay na sovereign state ay hindi iyong maingay lamang sa pagdepensa sa independence. Ang tunay na sovereign state ay iyong may kakayahang pairalin ang hustisya kahit mahirap, kahit politically inconvenient, at kahit masakit sa mga makapangyarihan.
This is precisely why the doctrine of complementarity under the Rome Statute matters. Unfortunately, this doctrine is often misunderstood by those who reduce international law to political slogans. The ICC was never designed to replace domestic courts as the primary venue for justice. Hindi ito first responder. Hindi ito international occupation force. This is not a global police agency waiting to invade sovereign jurisdictions. Quite the opposite. The ICC is structured around profound respect for sovereignty. The principle is simple. States are expected to prosecute serious crimes themselves. Only when credible questions arise regarding unwillingness or inability to genuinely prosecute does ICC intervention become legally relevant. Sa madaling salita, complementarity is sovereignty’s final examination. Binibigyan ka muna bilang estado ng pagkakataon. Pinagkakatiwalaan kang ipakita na kaya mong panagutin ang sarili mong mamamayan sa ilalim ng iyong sariling justice system.
But here lies the contradiction. If a state invokes sovereignty while accountability appears absent, delayed, politically compromised, or institutionally paralyzed, then difficult legal questions inevitably emerge. The Duterte administration’s withdrawal argument rested on sovereignty through institutional capability. The message was clear. Trust us. We have laws. We have courts. We can handle accountability. But competence claims create expectations. Hindi mo puwedeng sabihin sa buong mundo na kaya ninyong resolbahin ang accountability internally, tapos kapag lumabas ang mga tanong dahil tila walang visible accountability, biglang ang narrative ay pure foreign persecution. That is not constitutional consistency. That is narrative repositioning.
Another major misunderstanding in this debate involves temporal jurisdiction. One of the most persistent claims is that because the Philippines withdrew, all ICC jurisdiction instantly disappeared. That is legally inaccurate. Under Article 127 of the Rome Statute, withdrawal does not extinguish obligations arising while membership still existed. If alleged conduct occurred during the Philippines’ membership period, jurisdictional questions remain legally alive. Napakahalaga nito because the stronger legal basis for ICC scrutiny is not even necessarily contemporary domestic cooperation arguments. It is a historical legal jurisdiction. Kung ang alleged acts ay nangyari noong member pa ang Pilipinas, then withdrawal does not magically erase exposure. International law does not function like deleting a browser history after a controversial search.
And now we arrive at Alan Peter Cayetano, because history sometimes writes irony with astonishing precision. Few political figures occupy such a uniquely layered position in this national controversy. Not because he is the accused, and certainly not because institutional association automatically means legal culpability, but because his political footprints appear in multiple chapters of the same accountability story. That makes his role academically fascinating.
As a legislator, Alan Peter Cayetano belonged to the generation of policymakers involved in shaping the Philippine legal environment surrounding international accountability. RA 9851 did not emerge from nowhere. It was a deliberate legislative acknowledgment that crimes against humanity, genocide, and grave humanitarian law violations are legitimate legal categories that civilized states must recognize. In that sense, Cayetano’s association with that legal ecosystem matters because it places him among policymakers who accepted the coexistence of sovereignty and accountability.
But history did not stop there.
Years later, Alan Peter Cayetano became Secretary of Foreign Affairs under President Rodrigo Duterte. That transition elevated his significance enormously. He was no longer simply a domestic political actor participating in legislative discussions. He became the official diplomatic voice of the Republic of the Philippines before the international community. And this matters profoundly because when the Philippines formally communicated its withdrawal from the Rome Statute to the United Nations in 2018, the legal and diplomatic rationale emphasizing domestic accountability mechanisms carried the institutional authority of the Philippine state, and Alan Peter Cayetano’s signature.
That signature matters.
Hindi iyan simpleng clerical detail. Hindi iyan autograph lamang. In diplomacy, a Foreign Affairs Secretary’s signature becomes official state memory. It becomes documentary evidence of sovereign representation. It becomes archived legal doctrine. It becomes part of the Republic’s formal narrative before international institutions. In governance analysis, signatures are not merely ink. They are commitments.
This is what makes Alan Peter Cayetano’s role politically and academically significant. As DFA Secretary, he effectively became one of the principal messengers of the sovereign argument that the Philippines remained fully capable of handling accountability through its own laws and institutions. The message was not one of escape. It was one of institutional confidence. Trust our laws. Trust our courts. Trust our sovereignty.
And history adds yet another remarkable layer.
Today, Alan Peter Cayetano serves as Senate President. This means the same political figure appears in different institutional uniforms across the same accountability narrative. As a legislator, he was part of the legal architecture. As a diplomat, he defended sovereign legal capacity before the international community. As Senate President, he now occupies one of the country’s most politically central institutions while the consequences of those earlier state commitments continue unfolding.
To be absolutely clear, this is not an accusation of personal wrongdoing. Academic integrity requires precision. Political symbolism is not legal culpability. Institutional continuity is not criminal liability. But governance scholars cannot ignore the continuity of state narratives. Political actors create legal frameworks. Diplomats defend them. Future institutions inherit their consequences.
That is why Alan Peter Cayetano’s role deserves deeper examination.
He represents, in many ways, the Philippine state’s evolving and sometimes contradictory relationship with sovereignty, accountability, and international law. As legislator, accountability frameworks were embraced. As diplomat, domestic accountability was cited as justification for withdrawal. Yet within contemporary political discourse, accountability itself is sometimes portrayed as foreign persecution. That contradiction deserves serious reflection.
Because sovereignty, if invoked sincerely, demands institutional follow-through.
Now let us be fair. None of this requires blind faith in international institutions. Healthy skepticism toward foreign intervention is understandable, particularly for a postcolonial nation like ours. Hindi kahinaan ang pagiging maingat. Historical caution is legitimate. But caution must not become intellectual inconsistency. Skepticism must remain grounded in legal reasoning, not partisan emotion, not social media loyalty, and certainly not political theater.
Justice is not fan culture.
Constitutional law is not a popularity contest.
And sovereignty is not an invisibility cloak.
As someone who has spent years observing governance, institutions, public safety systems, and political behavior, I find the central question painfully simple. Was the Philippines sincere when it told the international community that its justice system could address crimes against humanity? Kung oo, then accountability should not frighten us. Kung hindi, then the withdrawal rationale weakens itself.
The strongest version of sovereignty is not one that runs away from scrutiny. The strongest version is one that welcomes accountability because it trusts its own institutions enough to confront even difficult truths. After all, iyon mismo ang ipinangakong narrative noon sa international community.
And perhaps that is why this controversy remains politically uncomfortable.
Because sometimes the most relentless adversary is not the opposition, not foreign critics, and not even international judges.
Minsan, ang pinakamalupit na witness ay ang sarili mong archived promises, complete with signatures, patiently waiting for history to remember.
#DJOT
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