Sen. Bato dela Rosa built his brand on fearlessness. He once dared Antonio Trillanes to personally slap on the handcuffs if the ICC issued a warrant over the Duterte drug war.
But this week, the swagger vanished.
Dela Rosa has been absent for three straight days in the Senate after Ombudsman Boying Remulla claimed he received a copy of an ICC arrest warrant – one that, according to Interior Secretary Jonvic Remulla, came from a mysterious “third source” and not from official channels. No one in the government has actually seen the original document.
Even so, the timing is striking. And the senator’s silence is louder than any denial.
Senate President Pro Tempore Ping Lacson was blunt: the Senate cannot shelter Dela Rosa indefinitely. Courtesy from law enforcement is just that – courtesy.
“He can’t stay in the Senate premises forever… the Constitution will prevail,” Lacson said.
Meanwhile, the ICC has begun keeping warrant applications secret by default, meaning a real warrant could exist without public disclosure.
For a man who once mocked the idea of being arrested, Dela Rosa’s sudden disappearance raises the question he’s trying hard not to answer:
Was all that tough talk just talk?