Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is gradually tightening the noose on his sundry critics, in moves critics see as textbook vindictive politics. Buoyed by historic-high approval ratings, the Filipino strongman is chipping away at democratic institutions with force and speed.
The latest victim of his authoritarian lurch is the Ombudsman Office, a constitutionally independent body tasked with holding elected officials to account.
In a highly controversial move, one many legal experts view as unconstitutional, the Duterte administration perfunctorily sacked Overall Deputy Ombudsman Melchor Arthur Carandang, who has been charged with grave misconduct and placed on 90-day preventive suspension.
For months, the magistrate has been investigating allegations of corruption against the president and his family members, specifically alleged secret overseas bank accounts owned by Duterte and his children. The move comes amid allegations that Duterte’s son, Paolo, is involved in illegal drug smuggling – charges the until recently vice mayor of Davao City has strenuously denied.
For a president who prides himself in his supposed probity and simple lifestyle, the Ombudsman Office’s probe was nothing short of a direct assault on his public image and persona.
In response, an incensed administration accused Caradang of violating a banking secrecy law as well as grave abuse of power for “falsely claiming” that the Ombudsman Office received a document regarding the president’s supposed secret bank accounts from the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMlC).

The AMlC, a task force designed to track suspicious money transactions to and from the country, denied that it has ever submitted any documents to the Ombudsman.
The magistrate has been accused of dishonesty, misusing confidential information and disclosing false information, thus violating the law against “causing any undue injury to any party including the government or giving any private party any unwarranted benefits.”
Carandang is also accused of violating administrative orders by “divulging valuable information of confidential character acquired by his office or by him on account of his official position to unauthorized persons or releasing such information in advance for its authorized release date.”
Critics, however, have slammed Carandang’s de facto sacking as unconstitutional and a direct assault on the country’s democratic institutions. They cite a Supreme Court Ruling in 2014 that upheld the independence of the Ombudsman Office from executive interference.
Packed with Duterte loyalists, the government now hopes the country’s highest court will “revisit” its earlier decision. Just weeks earlier, the government also revoked the operating license of online news outlet, Rappler, based on questionable allegations of ‘foreign ownership.’ The constitution forbids foreign ownership in media.
The Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) decision against Rappler has been widely interpreted as a quasi-legal silencing of a top Duterte critic. Now, many fear the president is going after the last bastions of independence within the state, especially the Ombudsman Office.

The Ombudsman Office is now led by Conchita Carpio Morales, a fiercely independent former Supreme Court justice who has repeatedly declared that her office will not be intimidated by Duterte’s threats.
Duterte threatened late last year to impeach Morales and challenged her to preemptively resign, the magistrate, who happens to be a relative of the president, declared that she “will not be baited into abandoning [her] constitutional duties.”
The president has repeatedly accused her and other independent figures such as Supreme Court Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Aranal Sereno of serving the political opposition’s agenda. Sereno currently faces possible impeachment by the Duterte-leaning Philippine Congress, based on what many view as politically motivated charges aimed at silencing opposition in high state offices.
Duterte’s supporters often emphasize that former president Benigno Aquino III, now the de facto opposition leader who also faces possible charges of criminal negligence for the deaths of 44 commandos in a 2015 botched anti-terror raid, appointed Sereno and Morales.
They see the government’s gathering crackdown on critics as a lawful and pre-emptive purge of a cabal of conspirators bent on deposing the democratically elected president. Street demonstrations have brought down at least two elected administrations in the Philippines, namely the Ferdinand Marcos and Joseph Estrada regimes.

Opposition legislators were quick to describe Duterte’s latest move as “dictatorial” and unconstitutional. Congressman Gary Alejano, who belongs to the tiny opposition faction in the legislature’s lower house, accused the government of “destroy[ing] the very concept of ‘independence’ of the Ombudsman, which insulates it from political pressures and allows it to perform its mandate.”
Alejano maintained that the charges against Carandang were “ill-founded” since the magistrate “did not release any document to the public or expose substantial portions of the supposed bank records” of the president and his family members who currently serve in the government.
Duterte’s son, Paolo, recently resigned as vice mayor of Davao City, the president’s hometown, amid unproven allegations he is involved in a Chinese illegal drug syndicate. He claimed his resignation was due to recent personal “unfortunate events”, including a failed marriage and public spat with his daughter. His alleged offshore bank accounts were believed to be a subject of the Ombudsman Office’s investigations.
Senator Antonio Trillanes III, a vocal critic of the president who has pursued the drug allegations against his son, condemned Carandang’s dismissal as an “impeachable offense” for violating the constitution. He described the move as “another Duterte tactic that’s meant to bully democratic institutions into submission so he could go on with his dictatorial and corrupt ways.”
Duterte can rely on the support of highly quiescent politicians in Congress and an increasingly deferential Supreme Court, which has repeatedly sided with the president on controversial decisions in the past year. As the country moves from democracy to dictatorship, there may soon be no independent voices or credible checks and balances left.

duterte has no laws. he s a tyrant.
Garie Zamora Delacruz duterte s the garbage media. all lies. u r still not awaken.
Embrace the next DICTATOR. Let go back to 1970’s. Expect the Unexpected. Experience the Rise and Fall of the TYRANT.
Philippines "democracy" must be a truly awful thing if you guys are willing to throw it all away in order to entrust Duterte with the powers of a dictator. I pity the Philippines for being such a loser.
good to rally student ……welcome ML is coming…time to thick now…..
Best President ever..
We still believed PRRD
Dutertes still the best president!
Those oligarch like liberal party is one of the curropt in the philippines!
Alot of positive change in the philippines where the media is only fucosing in negative issue!try to experience the realty not by reading or watching in philippine garbage media
Really?duterte is a good leaders than others!try to know more about his accomplishment and what are those positive change in the philippines. exeperience by ur own not by defending in a garbage media in the philippines!
i dont think its factual.
Another misleading news! Duterte is not silencing his critics but he is after government official who violated the law!
Winter is coming
This is purely an opinion.. Try to listen to us who really knows what is happening on the ground.
Gabby Jose is a PAID CYBERTROLL tsk tsk tsk
James Greaves hard headed filipino need a president like marcos and duterte… after marcos the philippines become a drug den of the world, people are scammer, laglag bala in the airport, holdup’r and snatcher are every where!
Jason Castaneda is a LIAR.
: Jay, have you not learned in the Philippines by now that it never pays to "stack all of your eggs in the one basket"? In politics popularity is a fleeting, transitory phenominum. I believe that Ferdinand Marcos was initially very popular too but look at where he led the Philippines after he became supreme autocrat.
80% really? 16M is not 80% of 100M population ????
its none of your business Asia times, we, the people of the Philippines are the one who will check and balance our president, as of now 80%+ of Filipinos are supportive of our president
Rodrigo Duterte = Ferdinand Marcos in his second coming.