Philippine court upholds martial law as siege’s end seen
MANILA, Philippines — The Philippine Supreme Court upheld on Tuesday the president’s declaration of martial law in the south in a legal boost to a military offensive that the defence chief said may soon succeed in quelling an uprising by Islamic State group-linked militants.
Supreme Court spokesman Theodore Te said 11 of 15 justices voted to dismiss petitions against the declaration of martial law, which President Rodrigo Duterte imposed across the country’s southern third for 60 days after hundreds of gunmen waving IS-style black flags laid siege to southern Marawi city on May 23.
The petitioners argued the siege did not constitute a rebellion that could justify martial rule which might foster human rights abuses in a country that ousted dictator Ferdinand Marcos in a 1986 revolt for massive rights violations.
“We were hoping the Supreme Court would be our last line of defence against a patently absurd decision built on a failure of intelligence and a rhetoric of violent machismo,” said Machris Cabreros of Akbayan, a left-wing political party whose officers were among the petitioners. “Instead they caved in and unwittingly opened the door to further creeping authoritarianism.”


