Leila de Lima

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Leila de Lima
De Lima in 2016
Senator of the Philippines
In office
June 30, 2016 – June 30, 2022
Chair of the Senate Electoral Reforms and People's Participation Committee
In office
July 25, 2016 – July 24, 2018
Preceded byKoko Pimentel
Succeeded byKoko Pimentel
Chair of the Senate Justice and Human Rights Committee
In office
July 25, 2016 – September 19, 2016
Preceded byKoko Pimentel
Succeeded byDick Gordon
Secretary of Justice
In office
June 30, 2010 – October 12, 2015
PresidentBenigno Aquino III
Preceded byAlberto Agra (acting)
Succeeded byAlfredo Benjamin Caguioa (acting)
Chairperson of the Commission on Human Rights
In office
May 2008 – June 30, 2010
PresidentGloria Macapagal Arroyo
Preceded byPurificacion Quisumbing
Succeeded byEtta Rosales
Personal details
Born
Leila Norma Eulalia Josefa Magistrado de Lima

(1959-08-27) August 27, 1959 (age 64)
Iriga, Camarines Sur, Philippines
Political partyLiberal (2015–present)
Other political
affiliations
Independent (2010–2015)
Aksyon Demokratiko (2001–2010)
SpousePláridel Bohol (annulled)
Children2
RelativesLilia de Lima (aunt)
Julie de Lima (aunt)
Alma materDe La Salle University (AB)
San Beda College (LL.B)
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionLawyer
Signature
WebsiteOfficial website

Leila Norma Eulalia Josefa Magistrado de Lima (born August 27, 1959) is a Filipina politician, lawyer, human rights activist and law professor who previously served as a Senator of the Philippines from 2016 to 2022. She was the chairperson of the Commission on Human Rights from 2008 to 2010, before serving in President Benigno Aquino III's cabinet as Secretary of Justice from 2010 to 2015.

Known as a vocal critic of the administration of President Rodrigo Duterte, she was arrested in 2017 under charges linked to the New Bilibid Prison drug trafficking scandal during her term as Justice Secretary.[1] Later that year, she was awarded the Prize for Freedom by the Liberal International. She was held in pretrial detention until November 13, 2023,[2] although she served out her remaining term as senator and filed legislation while held.

Early life[edit]

De Lima is the eldest daughter of former Philippine Commission on Elections commissioner Vicente de Lima and Norma Magistrado.[3][4] She was born and raised in Iriga, Camarines Sur in Bicol.[4]

De Lima completed her basic education at La Consolacion Academy (now La Consolacion College Iriga), graduating as class valedictorian. She graduated in 1980 from the De La Salle University with an AB History and Political Science degree. She finished her Bachelor of Laws (Salutatorian) degree at the San Beda College of Law in 1985.[4] She placed 8th in the 1985 Philippine Bar Examinations with an 86.26% bar rating.[5][6]

Career[edit]

De Lima began her career as a staff member of Supreme Court Associate Justice Isagani Cruz from 1986 to 1989. She subsequently entered private practice in the 1990s, specializing in election law. She also taught law at San Beda College of Law from 1986 to 1994 and from 2006 to 2007 and worked as secretary of the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal from 1993 to 1995.[4][6]

Human rights commissioner (2008–2010)[edit]

Leila de Lima was appointed as the Chairperson of the Commission on Human Rights under the administration of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, serving from 2008 to 2010.[4] Her two-year term was marked by high-profile cases such as the Davao Death Squad,[7] human rights cases against general Jovito Palparan,[8] and the Maguindanao massacre in 2009.

Justice Secretary (2010–2015)[edit]

In 2010, President Benigno Aquino III offered her the position of Justice secretary, for which she accepted. Her first high-profile case was the Manila hostage crisis, where eight Hong Kong nationals were killed.[4]

During the 2015 Iglesia ni Cristo leadership controversy and its subsequent protests, de Lima was criticized for meddling in the internal affairs of the denomination.[9][10]

Senator (2016–2022)[edit]

Leila de Lima ran as a senatorial candidate for the 2016 general elections under the Koalisyon ng Daang Matuwid (lit.'Coalition of the Straight Road') of the Liberal Party. She finished 12th, after amassing more than 14 million votes.

De Lima condemned the Philippine Drug War and urged Congress to investigate.[11] She called for an end to vigilante killings of drug suspects. On her privilege speech at the Senate on August 2, she noted that "we cannot wage the war against drugs with blood..."[12] De Lima lamented the indifference of President Rodrigo Duterte's government to extrajudicial killings and warned that more innocent people will suffer if the killings fail to stop.[13]

In 2022, de Lima ran for reelection as senator under the Liberal Party, but lost after placing in 23rd position.[14][15]

Imprisonment and trial[edit]

Allegations[edit]

On August 17, 2016, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte alleged that de Lima was having an affair with her driver, Ronnie Dayan, who Duterte also alleged functioned as de Lima's collector for drug protection money when she was Justice secretary.[16][17] Duterte also alleged that Dayan had been using drugs.[18] Duterte later claimed that he had in his possession wiretaps and ATM records which confirmed his allegations which he had received from an unnamed foreign country.[19] In September 2016, de Lima was removed as chair of the Senate Justice and Human Rights committee investigating extrajudicial killings.[20] She later admitted that she had a relationship with Dayan many years ago. Justice secretary Vitaliano Aguirre called on convicted drug lords, former prison officials and police officers as prime witnesses against de Lima in a congressional probe on illegal drug trafficking in the New Bilibid Prison.[21][22][23] Dayan went into hiding after being advised by de Lima to not attend the House probe, but was captured days later.[24]

Albuera, Leyte Mayor Rolando Espinosa corroborated allegations that de Lima benefited from the illegal drug activities of his son Kerwin Espinosa in Eastern Visayas.[25] Included in the Mayor's affidavit is a picture of de Lima with Kerwin Espinosa in Baguio City.[26] Kerwin Espinosa later testified that he gave her a total of 8 million to help finance her senatorial campaign in 2016.[27]

On July 19, 2019, the PNPCriminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) filed charges against de Lima and other members of the opposition for "sedition, cyber libel, libel, estafa, harboring a criminal, and obstruction of justice".[28][29][30] On February 10, 2020, she was cleared of all charges.[31][32]

Retracted testimonies[edit]

In late April 2022, Kerwin Espinosa recanted his statements on the case, and said that he was coerced by the police after his father was killed in jail.[33] The Department of Justice downplayed his recantation, saying it did not affect their case against de Lima, as he was not a witness.[34]

In early May 2022, Rafael Ragos, former Bureau of Corrections director general and another witness in de Lima's drug case recanted his testimony. Ragos previously testified that de Lima accepted ₱5 million from him via drug lord Peter Co, while she was Secretary of Justice, and that it was later used to fund her senatorial campaign in 2016.[35] Ragos alleged that Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II coerced him to lie to implicate de Lima. Aguirre denied the accusation.[36]

Co-accused Ronnie Dayan also recanted his testimony in May 2022. Dayan alleged that Representative Reynaldo Umali had coerced him to lie in his 2016 testimony in Congress.[37]

In October 2023, former police officers PMaj. Rodolfo Magleo and PSgt. Nonilo Arile retracted their testimonies against de Lima.[38]

Court decisions[edit]

De Lima was acquitted in two court cases filed against her. She has one case pending with the Muntinlupa Regional Trial Court Branch 204.[39]

On January 5, 2022, the Ombudsman dismissed bribery complaints filed in 2018 against de Lima and Ronnie Dayan, citing lack of probable cause to indict the two, in connection with accusations that de Lima received a total of ₱8 million from Kerwin Espinosa, allegedly through Dayan, on four separate occasions in 2015–2016. The ruling was only made public in August.[40][41]

On May 27, 2022, Muntinlupa Regional Trial Court Branch 206 dismissed the petition to cite de Lima and her legal counsel, Filibon Tacardon, in indirect contempt over their statements on the testimonies of prosecution witnesses, citing lack of merit and rendering other pending incidents as moot and academic.[42]

Detention and legal proceedings[edit]

Senator Leila de Lima listens to a PNP-CIDG officer who served the warrant for her arrest at the Senate grounds in Pasay. February 24, 2017.

On February 17, 2017, a court pressed drug-related charges against de Lima.[43] On February 23, the Muntinlupa Regional Trial Court issued an arrest warrant against de Lima for allegedly violating the drug trafficking law.[44][45] De Lima faces drug related cases for allegedly using her position as Secretary of Justice to acquire money from drug pushers to make their drug business operational even though they are imprisoned. de Lima turned herself in the following morning of February 24, 2017. She has also been referred to as a 'prisoner of conscience' by numerous international human rights organizations.[46][47]

On February 5, 2018, the Ombudsman of the Philippines cleared de Lima from all charges of financial terrorism and violation of the anti-graft law.[48] On February 20, during the World Day of Social Justice, all ethics complaints filed against de Lima were junked by the Philippine Senate.[49][50]

On March 3, 2018, de Lima sought the approval of the court to let her attend the looming impeachment trial against Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno.[51][52] On March 10, a court approved de Lima's medical furlough due to problems in her liver.[53] On March 13, the self-confessed drug lords were freed by the government due to 'lack of evidence'.[54][55] On April 5, Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II, who initiated de Lima's imprisonment, resigned after evidences on corruption surfaced to media attention, along with his acquittal of the self-confessed drug lords.[56]

On May 28, 2018, the Muntinlupa court denied de Lima's plea to attend the law graduation of her youngest son, Vincent.[57] The court stated that de Lima 'cannot be given a different treatment as that of other prisoners'.[58] On May 30, de Lima filed a motion to reconsider her plea to attend her son's graduation, citing convicted plunderer and ex-senator Jinggoy Estrada, who was allowed by the Sandiganbayan to attend his son's graduation in 2015.[59] Hours before her son's graduation on June 3, Presiding Judge Amelia Fabros-Corpuz of the Muntinlupa Regional Trial Court Branch 205 rejected de Lima's motion for reconsideration in attending to her son's law graduation.[60]

On June 6, the Supreme Court of the Philippines upheld the 'constitutionality' of de Lima's arrest based on drug charges filed by Aguirre, blasting calls from international human rights organizations.[61] The court added that 'no further pleadings will be entertained', effectively blocking all remedies for release.[62] On August 6, the Supreme Court denied de Lima's plea to allow her to join the Senate debates regarding Duterte's initiative to withdraw the Philippines from the International Criminal Court.[63][64] On August 10, 18 months after her imprisonment, de Lima was finally arraigned in the drug cases established by the Department of Justice.[65]

On August 3, Ronnie Dayan formally refused to testify against her alleged 'disobedience case'.[66]

On October 8, 2022, de Lima survived an attempted hostage taking inside Camp Crame after detainees said to be linked with the Abu Sayyaf Group stabbed a police officer. Police reported that de Lima was safe and that the officer was hospitalized.[67]

Recognition and calls for release[edit]

On March 16, 2017, the European Parliament condemned the wave of killings in the Philippines and called for de Lima's release.[68] It expressed "serious concerns that the offences Senator de Lima has been charged with are almost entirely fabricated".[69] Amnesty International regards de Lima as a "prisoner of conscience".[70] Despite her imprisonment, de Lima continued to oppose the policies of Duterte and remained a member of the Philippine Senate and the Liberal Party.[71][72][73]

On March 29, 2018, Human Rights Watch (HRW) and the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) called for de Lima's release due to the insufficiency of evidence filed against her.[74][75]

In late July 2017, de Lima was visited by members of the European Parliament and the Liberal International.[76][77] In September, the Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats (CALD) demanded de Lima's immediate release and the restoration of human rights in the Philippines.[78] In the same month, de Lima's ally in the Senate, Risa Hontiveros, caught justice secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II drafting fabricated charges against her through text messages during a hearing on the deaths of minors caused by the Philippine Drug War. The same tactic was used by him against de Lima, which led to her arrest.[79] In November 2017, de Lima was awarded the Prize for Freedom by Liberal International, becoming the second Filipino to receive the prestigious award after Corazon Aquino.[80] She formally accepted the prize in absentia on July 28, 2018.[81] On December 5, 2017, she was again awarded with the Leading Global Thinker award by Foreign Policy for the second consecutive year.[82]

On February 1, 2018, de Lima topped Asian Correspondent's list of five prominent Southeast Asian leaders and human rights defenders who are facing charges for defying the norm.[83] On February 3, de Lima was dubbed as the "conscience of our time" by an independent news agency.[84] On February 20, the ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR) called for de Lima's immediate and unconditional release and cited her 'heroism'[85] against corruption and autocracy.[86] It was followed by the Senate minority bloc, liberal members of the House of Representatives, and Amnesty International pushing anew for her release.[87][88][89] On April 20, de Lima was named by Fortune Magazine as one of the 'World's 50 Greatest Leaders' for 2018.[90] On May 29, Amnesty International conferred to de Lima its first ever Most Distinguished Human Rights Defender award during the Ignite Awards for Human Rights.[91][92] She was also declared one of the world's “Women Human Rights Defenders Under Threat”.[93] On de Lima's birthday on August 27, Amnesty International called for the dropping of charges again, adding that she is a 'prisoner of conscience'.[94] Opposition lawmakers also called for her release.[95]

On June 5, 2020, Amnesty International called on Philippine authorities to unconditionally release de Lima. It also called for them to end unreasonable restrictions imposed on her; permit communication with her family, lawyers, staff and doctors; and allow her to undertake her role as an elected legislator and a human rights defender.[96]

Statements from detention[edit]

Since October 2017, de Lima released numerous statements while in prison condemning the death toll of the Philippine Drug War which by then had killed 14,000 people, mostly minors.[80]

In her 94th letter while in prison on May 29, 2018, de Lima stated "People choose to be passive, perhaps because they feel responsible for voting for him—but no. You are not responsible for what he does after you vote for him. You are, however, responsible for letting him get away with things like this with your silence. By electing him, he has not bought your souls and conscience—on the contrary, he now owes you his accountability."[97][98]

Release on bail[edit]

On November 13, 2023, the Muntinlupa RTC granted de Lima's petition for bail on her remaining drug charge, guaranteeing her release after six years in detention.[2] She was released from Camp Crame that evening after paying a bond of ₱300,000.[99]

Following her release, de Lima held a press conference at Novotel Manila Araneta City, during which she stated that she forgave Duterte but was considering whether to file counter-complaints regarding the accusations against her.[100] After staying overnight in Quezon City, she then went on a pilgrimage to Manaoag, Pangasinan the next day[101] and reunited with her family in Iriga on November 15.[102]

Post-imprisonment[edit]

On December 4, 2023, de Lima was designated as the official spokesperson of the Liberal Party, having previously been its vice president for policy, platform, and advocacy.[103] On December 13, she announced that she would serve as a professor of De La Salle University's Tañada-Diokno School of Law starting in January 2024, marking her return to teaching law.[104]

Political positions[edit]

De Lima was unable to vote against the Congressional vote on extending martial law in Mindanao following the Battle of Marawi in 2017 because of her detention.[76] In December 2017, de Lima criticized Duterte for his pivot to China, citing what happened in Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Malaysia, and Cambodia, where those countries were put by China in a debt trap after accepting Chinese loans, leading to China's economic control on those countries.[82]

In January 2018, de Lima criticized Duterte after it was revealed that the national debt ballooned to ₱6.6 trillion and the debt-to-GDP ratio expanded into 36.4%.[105] She also criticized the government for 'bowing down' to China amidst the South China Sea dispute and Chinese exploration in the Benham Rise.[106][107][108]

De Lima sought Senate inquiries regarding the terms of loans of the government's infrastructure program, which indebted the country rapidly within a few months,[109] and the anti-money laundering law compliance after the Ombudsman dropped all money laundering cases against Duterte due to his administration's threats.[110] On April 4, de Lima filed a dismissal for the ouster petition filed against Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno.[111] On May 13, de Lima joined liberal senators in condemning Sereno's ouster through a quo warranto petition, which de Lima said was an unconstitutional way to oust an impeachable officer.[112][113]

On June 1, de Lima filed a resolution seeking to probe blacklisted Chinese firms that were accepted by the Duterte administration in the rehabilitation of Marawi despite being banned by the World Bank due to corrupt practices.[114] On June 3, de Lima filed a resolution seeking to probe the state-sponsored immigration of Chinese citizens into the Philippines which caused the unemployment of Filipinos.[115] On June 5, de Lima called solicitor-general Jose Calida, who had helped spearhead her arrest, as a 'role model in government corruption' after reports of a multi-million peso corruption scandal involving him surfaced.[116]

On July 25, de Lima wrote a letter expressing her dismay on the ascension of Duterte ally and former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, as House Speaker. She added that Arroyo's rise to power via unconstitutional means has led to the rise of the country's 'true minority'.[117] On July 31, de Lima called on Congress to pass a bill seeking to prohibit premature campaigning in elections.[118] On August 28, she also pushed for a bill that seeks to increase the pension of qualified indigent senior citizens.[119] She also sought the passage of the Pedestrian Safety Act.[120]

On August 1, de Lima welcomed the indictment against Pork barrel scam mastermind Janet Lim-Napoles.[121] On August 4, de Lima and other senators spearheaded the need to probe the conditions of displaced persons in war-torn areas of Mindanao, notably in Marawi.[122] On August 7, de Lima pushed for the passage of the calamity leave bill, which would provide 5 days of calamity leave for workers.[123] On August 11, de Lima filed a bill on incentivizing the use of solar energy in households.[124] On the same day, she joined other senators in calling for a ban on single-occupancy vehicles on EDSA.[125] On August 18, de Lima expressed the need to probe the Bureau of Immigration's ₱869-M loss from express lane fees.[126]

On August 24, minority senators called on the Supreme Court to allow de Lima to be present during the ICC withdrawal case through video conference.[127] On August 25, de Lima called for a Senate probe into delays in the free irrigation law's mandated implementing rules and regulations.[128] On August 30, de Lima filed a bill that would raise the statutory age of rape to 18.[129]

Writings[edit]

On February 22, 2018, de Lima announced that she would launch an e-book, entitled, "Dispatches from Crame I" on February 23, a day before the anniversary of her incarceration. On February 23, the e-book was officially launched at the office of the Commission on Human Rights in Quezon City. It contained all the statements and letters written by her since she her imprisonment in 2017. It also contained statements from her supporters from various local and international organizations and personalities.[130][131]

On June 1, 2018, a book by de Lima's spiritual adviser, Fr. Robert Reyes, entitled, Prisoner of Conscience Prisoner of Hope, was launched, containing various accounts from different personalities giving their views of and conversations with de Lima during her incarceration.[132][133]

On de Lima's birthday on August 27, 2018, she released her second book, entitled, Fight for Freedom and Other Writings, which collects her speeches, letters, and notes, as well as letters of support from prominent personalities such as Vice President Leni Robredo, former Hong Kong Legislative Council Member Emily Lau, and Liberal International President Juli Minoves.[134][135]

Personal life[edit]

De Lima was previously married for more than thirty years to lawyer Plaridel Bohol, who was her classmate in college, before their marriage was annulled. She has two children.[4][136][137]

De Lima's aunt, Julie de Lima, married Communist Party of the Philippines founder Jose Maria Sison, making him her uncle by marriage.[8] Another aunt, Lilia de Lima, served as the head of the Philippine Economic Zone Authority and is a Ramon Magsaysay Awardee.[138]

Following her release, De Lima, who describes herself as a dog lover, adopted five cats from Camp Crame who accompanied her constantly during her detention.[139]

Honors and recognition[edit]

  • MetroBank Foundation Professorial Chair for Public Service and Governance (2010)
  • Excellent Public Servant Award (2010)
  • Defender of People's Rights (2010)
  • “Agent of Change” Award (2010)
  • Most Outstanding Alumna Award 2010 by San Beda University[140]
  • Most Outstanding Alumna Award 2011 by San Beda University[140]
  • 2016 Global Thinker Award by Foreign Policy
  • Top Most Influential People for 2017 by Time Magazine[141]
  • Women Human Rights Defenders for 2017 by Amnesty International
  • The 2017 Prize For Freedom by Liberal International.[142]
  • 2017 Leading Global Thinker Award[143]
  • World's 50 Greatest Leaders for 2018 by Fortune Magazine[90]
  • 2018 Southeast Asia's Women to Watch by The Diplomat[144]
  • 2018 Most Distinguished Human Rights Defender Award by Amnesty International[91]
  • 2018 Women Human Rights Defenders Under Threat recognized by Amnesty International[93]
  • 2018 Human Rights Defenders recognized at the Human Rights Defender World Summit in Paris[93]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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External links[edit]

Senate of the Philippines
Preceded by Chair of the Philippine Senate Electoral Reforms and
People's Participation Committee

2016–2018
Succeeded by
Chair of the Philippine Senate
Justice and Human Rights Committee

2016
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Secretary of Justice
2010–2015
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairperson of the Philippine Commission on Human Rights
2008–2010
Succeeded by