DEDUTERTEFICATION: Purging the Duterte Virus
Read my latest oped for the Inquirer, where I reflect on the unsettling pride of his supporters and why we must stand against it.
Dedutertefication
By Carlos H. Conde
Philippine Daily Inquirer
February 26, 2026
AFTER listening to human rights lawyer Joel Butuyanâs opening speech at the International Criminal Court (ICC) on Monday, during the confirmation of charges against former President Rodrigo Duterte, I felt something stir inside meâsomething between grief and fury that I have carried for years.
In his powerful speech, the common legal representative for the victims of the âdrug warâ denounced the virus of impunity that Duterte spread across the Philippines, infecting Filipinos to the point that they could no longer discern right from wrong, evil from good. Butuyan provided the context that this moment desperately neededânot just for the hearing, but for this entire saga of Duterte-era atrocities that scarred our nation. He named the disease. He described the rot. And sitting in that cold, somber gallery, I felt every word land like an accusation against a country that still hasnât fully reckoned with what it allowed to happen.
I was unsettled because I knew exactly how Butuyan felt. I know exactly where that outrage comes from, because I have lived inside it for years. The toll of Duterteâs âdrug warâ and his Davao Death Squad has overwhelmed me over the years and decades, as it has so many others like myselfâactivists, journalists, lawyersâwho have spent careers documenting Duterteâs depravity while the rest of the world looked away, and while too many of our own countrymen cheered. We did not document these horrors from a distance. We were there. We saw what was done to people. We know their names.
Beside me in the public gallery sat photojournalist Raffy Lerma, one of the people who bore unflinching witness to the killing fields Duterte created. When Duterteâs lawyer, Nicholas Kaufman, made the cynical move to discredit Lermaâs âPietĂ â-like photographâa devastating image of a wife cradling her husband, shot dead by police in Pasay, which the Inquirer ran on its front page in 2016âI instinctively reached over and placed my hand on his back. Both of us had our heads bowed, as if in prayer. We were mourning. Not just the violence visited upon so many Filipinos at Duterteâs direction, but now, in real time, we were mourning the brazen lies being deployed in a court of law to defend that violence. Kaufmanâs move was not just cynicalâit was obscene. To take a photograph that captured one of the most intimate and devastating moments of a womanâs life, a moment born directly from state-sanctioned murder, and use it as a prop for legal maneuveringâit was an act of violence in itself.
After the hearing, not far from the ICC premises, a group of Duterte supporters stood chanting his name. They were boisterous, loud, proudâas if what they were doing, what they were shouting into the gray Dutch sky, were the most righteous thing in the world. That pride is what stopped me cold as I made my way to the bus stop that freezing afternoon. Not the noise. The pride. The utter, unshakeable conviction that they were on the right side of history, when historyâreal, documented, blood-soaked historyâscreams otherwise.
I went home that night weighed down by a sadness I struggle to articulate. Because this is not just about Duterte. It never was. It is about the millions of Filipinos who looked at the bodies piling up in the streets and felt nothing or, worse, felt satisfied. It is about the close friends and relativesâand I suspect most Filipinos reading this know exactly what I meanâwho chose, and still choose, to ignore the brutality. Those who dismiss the dead as collateral, as criminals, as acceptable losses in a war that was never a war but a massacre. For what? For the adoration of a man who built his entire identity on violence and contempt for human life? Because he spoke crudely and people mistook cruelty for authenticity? Because he was âone of usâ?
That bargain is obscene. And we need to say so, loudly, without diplomatic hedging.
An hour or so before I began writing this, a new Facebook friend sent me a message with a single, striking suggestion: perhaps the Philippines needs âdeduterteficationâ the way postwar Germany needed denazificationâa systematic, painful, national confrontation with what happened, who enabled it, and why, so that it can never happen again.
He is right. The ICC process is necessary but not sufficient. What the Philippines needs is a genuine moral reckoningâin schools, in media, in families, in politics. We need to look honestly at the culture of impunity that made Duterte not just possible but popular. We need to stop treating his supportersâ feelings as more important than his victimsâ lives.
Dedutertefication. It wonât be easy. It wonât be comfortable. But it is the only path back to a country worth believing in.
Carlos Conde, a former correspondent for The New York Times in Manila and until recently the researcher on the Philippines at Human Rights Watch, now edits Rights Report Philippines, a nonprofit journalism project that focuses on human rights.


