A collective sigh of relief: Why blocking Duterte’s interim release matters

For years, the families of those killed in the Philippines’ “War on Drugs” have been living in a kind of in-between state. Waiting for accountability. Waiting for the day powerful men would no longer seem beyond reach.

Yesterday, it felt like they could finally exhale.

On Friday, November 28, the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague handed down a unanimous ruling that echoed all the way to Manila: Rodrigo Duterte’s request for interim release was denied.

For people who have followed the slow, often draining progress of international justice, this doesn’t land as just another procedural notice. It doesn’t feel like a routine legal update at all. It feels like being seen. It suggests that the voices calling for justice are starting to cut through the noise of politics and power.

A victory for safety and truth

While there are evident legal and practical justifications for detaining the former president at The Hague, the emotional impact of this decision is significantly different.

The ICC judges backed the earlier chamber’s assessment: releasing Duterte would be risky. They noted the possibility that he might flee, but just as important, they underlined the threat to the integrity of the investigation. In the Philippines, fear has kept many witnesses silent for years. So when the court openly recognizes that his release could endanger witnesses or disrupt the case, it brings real relief to those who chose to testify despite that fear.

The message is simple enough: witness safety comes first. The courage of survivors is finally being met with concrete protection.


Dismantling the “Health” defense

There was also a real sense of vindication in watching the court reject the so-called “humanitarian” arguments for his release. The defense had argued that the 80-year-old former president was too frail or cognitively impaired to stay in detention, but the judges weren’t convinced.They concluded that these claims did not outweigh the risks they had identified. For families who lost sons, fathers, and brothers—many of whom were denied even the most basic humanitarian dignity in their last moments—watching the law applied the same way to everyone, without bending for age or former office, is a powerful experience. It chips away at the aura of invincibility that has surrounded Duterte for so many years.

A preliminary victory, a lasting hope

When the ruling was announced, reports described victims’ families breaking into cheers. The Union of Peoples’ Lawyers in Mindanao called it a “preliminary victory,” and that description fits. Yet for many, it also feels like a real turning point.

It’s also an acknowledgment of the long, exhausting work of human rights defenders, and of the mothers and widows who simply refused to be quiet.

No one is saying this is the finish line. The trial is still to come, and the path to a final judgment will be slow and uneven. Still, people can pause and take in what this moment means. For a brief while, they get to feel what it’s like to watch a justice system actually do what it’s meant to do.

At least for tonight, the fear that he might come back and slip past accountability has eased. Justice is no longer just a concept on paper; it’s something unfolding, step by step, one ruling at a time. And for the first time in a long while, hope is the loudest sound in the room.