Duterte tops De Lima list of people she wants banned in US

In this file photo taken July 25, 2016, President Rodrigo Duterte and Sen. Leila de Lima shake hands after the President delivered his 2016 State of the Nation Address at the Batasang Pambansa Complex in Quezon City.
PPD/King Rodriguez

MANILA, Philippines — President Duterte leads the personalities detained Sen. Leila de Lima wanted banned in the US for her detention over the past three years.

Ferdie Maglalang, the senator’s media officer, confirmed to

Philstar.com that a “longer and more detailed” list than that which the senator released last October

was submitted to the US embassy in the second week of January.

The embassy would then have sent the document to the US State Department, which will be responsible to implement a US budget provision that prohibits entry to US shores of people responsible for De Lima’s “wrongful imprisonment.” The embassy has yet to respond to our inquiries as of this posting.

While he declined to provide the complete list, Maglalang responded “yes” to

Philstar.com through a text message when we asked whether “all those on the initial list are on the final list.”

READ: 2020 US budget includes

ban on people behind 'wrongful imprisonment' of De Lima

The initial list of individuals, contained in Dispatch from Crame 612 last October 17, named Duterte and his spokesperson, Salvador Panelo, as people who orchestrated her “persecution.” “My persecution started with a daily public media demolition by none other than Duterte, using all his powers as President,” she said then.

At the time, the senator also included in the list Solicitor General Jose Calida, former Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre, Davao del Norte Rep. Pantaleon Alvarez, public attorney’s office chief Persida Acosta, and former Lower House legislators Reynaldo Umali and Rudy Farinas. 

These people, the senator said then, were responsible for the “public circus” that is the Lower House investigation into her supposed illegal drug links. Testimonies in the House probe later on served as

basis for illegal drug charges against De Lima.

De Lima, who marked her third year in detention at Camp

Crame on Monday, has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.

Mocha Uson, deputy executive director at the Overseas Workers’ Welfare Administration, and Sandra Cam of the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office were also part of De Lima’s initial list,

as well as bloggers Sass

Rogando Sasot and RJ Nieto. 

Slammed 

In a message to reporters on Tuesday, Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said: “I trust that the US State Department will exercise its own independent evaluation and exercise prudence and circumspection.”

De Lima’s list will serve as

basis for

the implementation of a US budget provision that imposes a US travel against people she considers her “persecutors.” Duterte has repeatedly said he would not travel to the US during his term as president.

A separate US resolution was likewise passed calling for the same ban

as well as financial sanctions against the same people. The resolution invoked a bipartisan law called the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act which affords the US government power to sanction those deemed to be human rights violators. 

Rising tensions

If implemented, a US travel ban on government officials would only increase tensions between the Philippines and its oldest ally. 

When the US budget law

was passed, Malacanang slammed the provision on the travel ban, calling it a violation of Philippine sovereignty. Months after, Sen. Ronald

dela Rosa’s US visa

was canceled in January, although it is unclear whether the move was an implementation of that provision.

READ: 'Why blame me?': Bato 'bothered' that canceled

visa led to VFA termination

Duterte then retaliated by ordering the abrogation of the Visiting Forces Agreement with the US. The cancellation of military alliance will take effect within 180 days from the receipt of notice by the US earlier this month.

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