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A pursuit in the senate, gunfire, now on the run: why is a former Philippines police chief in hiding? | Philippines
Ronald dela Rosa, a former head of police in the Philippines, is wanted for alleged crimes against humanity over his role in a bloody “war on drugs” during Rodrigo Duterte’s 2016-2022 presidency. The controversial senator has gone into hiding after a dramatic entry, then escape from the senate building in Manila last week.
The Philippines justice secretary has since ordered his arrest, calling him a “fugitive from justice”.
Who is Ronald dela Rosa?
Dela Rosa, 64, is a Philippine senator and former head of national police, who is known for his role as the chief enforcer of former president Rodrigo Duterte’s so-called “war on drugs”.
Known by the nickname “Bato”, which translates as “rock”, he is a celebrity-like figure in the Philippines, where he cultivated a tough-talking image, often making violent threats against drug dealers.
His close ties with Duterte date back to their shared roots in Davao, in Mindanao, southern Philippines, where dela Rosa served as city police chief from 2012-13 and Duterte was mayor for more than 20 years cumulatively.
It was in Davao that Duterte first rolled out his ruthless approach to law enforcement and established the Davao Death Squad (DDS), a group of police officers and non-police hitmen whose task was to kill alleged criminals, including drug dealers, according to International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutors. Dela Rosa is accused of helping to recruit individuals and direct the group.
When Duterte was elected president in 2016, he appointed dela Rosa head of Philippine national police to implement his “war on drugs” on a national scale. Dela Rosa vowed to “crush” drug lords, and once told crowds of surrendering drug users they could “kill” drug lords. “Pour gasoline on their houses and burn them. Show your anger,” he said.
Police say more than 6,000 suspects were killed in official anti-drug operations during Duterte’s presidency. Activists say the real death toll may never be known, with some estimates suggesting as many as 30,000 may have been killed.
After leaving the police force, dela Rosa was appointed the director general of Bureau of Corrections, before successfully running for the senate in 2019. He won a second senatorial term in May 2025.
Why is he wanted by the ICC?
The ICC has issued an arrest warrant for dela Rosa for alleged crimes against humanity for his role in Duterte’s “war on drugs”. Duterte was arrested last year and is imprisoned awaiting trial in The Hague.
The arrest warrant, first issued confidentially in November, but unsealed this month, accuses dela Rosa of implementing the “war on drugs” at a national level. This includes “encouraging the police to legitimise killings through fictitious self-defence scenarios, and promising impunity” and “ordering the police to kill specific targets and planning killing operations”. It also accuses him of “expressing approval and rewarding perpetrators of killings” and making public statements “authorising, condoning and promoting” the killing of alleged criminals.
ICC prosecutors also accuse him of playing a role in recruiting individuals who he could “trust and control” to the DDS in Davao. Members were easily replaced, the warrant says, adding that members were killed for opposing orders, “wanting to leave the DDS, or having too much information about the DDS killings”.
Dela Rosa has previously denied involvement in illegal killings. Duterte, who is accused of crimes against humanity, has also denied the charges against him.
Where is Dela Rosa?
Dela Rosa was last seen in public at the senate last week, when he made a surprise appearance after six months staying out of the public eye to avoid arrest.
He attended the senate to take part in a vote that would benefit his ally, the vice-president, Sara Duterte, the daughter of the former imprisoned leader.
In bizarre and dramatic scenes, he was chased through hallways and up staircases in the senate by government agents seeking his arrest. Dela Rosa managed to outpace them, and his allies in the senate granted him protective custody, a concept some deem legally dubious.
Dela Rosa remained inside the senate for three days in a standoff with the authorities. Tensions escalated into gunfire, for unclear reasons, and he disappeared from the heavily guarded building in the early hours of Thursday, 14 May. Some reports suggested he drove off in an SUV with a fellow Duterte-aligned senator.
His whereabouts are not known.
What happens next?
The justice secretary, Fredderick Vida, announced on Thursday that law enforcement had been ordered to apprehend dela Rosa, after the supreme court rejected the senator’s attempts to block his arrest. “We are pursuing this so that the ends of justice may be achieved,” Vida said.
Many questions remain over dela Rosa’s case. It’s unclear how dela Rosa managed to escape from the heavily guarded senate building last week without detection. It’s also unclear why the authorities had not previously acted on the ICC arrest warrant, which was first issued confidentially in November.
Vida said law enforcement agencies have “leads” on dela Rosa’s whereabouts and that the arrest would be carried out as soon as possible. In the unpredictable world of Philippine politics, it’s very difficult to know what might happen next.
UK News
French Open 2026: Sabalenka, Gauff and Medvedev in action on sweltering day three – live | French Open 2026
Key events
Medvedev isn’t enjoying himself at all, just about securing a hold for 2-6 2-1, an ace perhaps getting him going. And he quickly makes 0-40 when Walton serves next, but terrific hitting from the Aussie, who expertly moves him about the court, brings us to deuce.
I’ve not seen Komae play before, but a 17-year-old home wildcard, making his grand slam debut, has my attention. He’s giving Cilic plenty, down 3-4 on serve, and I’m excited to see what he does from here.
Five games in a row for Walton, who takes the first set off Medvedev 6-2 in just half an hour. I wonder if the no 6 seed is following a kind of José Mourinho arc, where he over-indexes on the confrontational stuff that helped make him brilliant to the exclusion of the other stuff that was equally important, losing the run of himself in the process.
Elsewhere, Alexei Popyrin leads Zachary Svajda 6-3; Donna Vekic is up 5-2 on Alice Tubello; Tallon Griekspoor and Matteo Arnaldi are level at 3-3; with Marin Cilic and Moise Kouame also level, at 2-2. Or, put another way, or better matchups come later in the day.
Though Medvedev has improved through the clay-court swing – Jannik Sinner needed three to get by him in the Italian Open semis – he’s made a rough start here, trailing Walton 4-2. That’s my main match for now.
Preamble
Salut tout le monde et bienvenue à Roland-Garros 2026 – troisième jour!
And, of course, what a troisième jour this promises to be. Standing out among stand-outs, we’ve Linda Noskova, seeded 12, facing Maria Sakkari; Cameron Norrie meets Daniel Vallejo; and Naomi Osaka takes on Laura Siegemund.
But the match of the day might just come first up on Chatrier, where Aryna Sabalenka, yet to win this pot, meets the excellent Jessica Bouzas Maneiro; don’t be surprised if that matures into an epic (but also, don’t be surprised, as if anyone could, should the world no 1 blaze into round two).
Otherwise, defending champ Coco Gauff tussles her good mate and doubles specialist Taylor Townsend; Alexandre Muller goes at Stefanos Tsitsipas; and Daniil Medvedev, not long since double-bagelled by Mario Berrettini, begins his campaign against Adam Walton. Then if, to that, we add Jacob Fearnley v Juan Manuel Cerundolo, Ana Kalinskaya v Loïs Boisson and Felix Auger-Aliassime v Daniel Altmaier, along with Marin Cilic, Madison Keys, Jess Pegula, Sascha Bublik and Learner Tien, we have a frankly ridiculous day of stuff that isn’t whatever we’re meant to be doing.
Chauette! On y va!
UK News
Watch: Top tips for staying safe in the sun
As the UK experiences a spell of scorching May weather, the BBC’s Elizabeth Rizzini has some useful advice.
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UK experiences ‘tropical night’ after hottest ever May day | UK weather
The UK experienced a “tropical night” on Monday as the record for highest daily minimum temperature in May was broken for the second consecutive day.
Temperatures did not fall below 21.3C on Monday at Kenley airfield in south London after the UK recorded its hottest May day since Met Office data began, the forecaster said.
The country also recorded its provisional all-time hottest meteorological spring temperature when Kew Gardens in south-west London hit 34.8C on Monday. The previous all-time May peak stood at 32.8C reached in 1922 and 1944.
The Met Office listed 12 locations where the record was topped on Monday – ranging from Suffolk to Berkshire to Warwickshire – while 97 of its monitoring sites reached or surpassed 30C.
The UK’s previous warmest May night was Sunday, when temperatures did not fall below 19.4C at Kenley airfield.
“We have provisionally broken the UK record for highest daily minimum temperature in May … again,” the forecaster said.
“Temperatures didn’t fall below 21.3C overnight at Kenley airfield, making it a ‘tropical night’ (no lower than 20C),” it added. “Remarkably, the record was also broken yesterday.”
“In the past, heatwaves built and built and built and built over days and days and days, these now just develop so quickly,” the Met Office’s senior forecaster Greg Dewhurst said on Monday, adding that climate change was boosting the heat.
On Tuesday, highs of 35C were expected for large swathes of southern England and Wales, which could reach near 36C, a Met Office meteorologist said. Those forecasts also spanned the Midlands, as well as south-east and south-west England, East Anglia and south Wales.
Many places across England and Wales will reach the heatwave threshold on Tuesday, with some having experienced it for five days by Wednesday, said Met Office meteorologist Becky Mitchell. There may be thunderstorms in the afternoon, affecting high temperatures.
A heatwave means temperatures must meet or surpass a specific threshold for three consecutive days. For this time of year, the highest heatwave threshold in the UK is 28C, applied to London and north of the capital towards Cambridgeshire.
In eight parts of England, those conditions were already met by Sunday evening, including in Heathrow, Kew Gardens and Northolt London, and locations in Oxfordshire, Suffolk and Essex. The figure was anticipated to be higher after the bank holiday weather, however data was yet to be released.
With nearly 100 sites having reached 30C on Monday, it “goes to show how many places would have succeeded their heatwave threshold”, said Mitchell.
While temperatures will gradually decline from midweek, largely dry with sunny spells are expected, with many still experiencing temperatures in the high 20Cs.
On Monday, fire and smoke spread across a large patch of Holyrood Park in Edinburgh near Arthur’s Seat. Emergency services went to the scene when the alarm was raised at about 6.50pm on Monday. The fire started in an area of vegetation near the ruins of St Anthony’s Chapel.
Two fire engines remained at the scene at 6.30am on Tuesday, with firefighters having worked through the night to tackle the blaze. Clouds of smoke could be seen rising from the area and local residents were advised to keep their windows and doors shut as a precaution.
In Spain and France, more new highs were likely to be set on Tuesday as the heatwave continued to sweep across Europe.
The risk of unnaturally hot extremes has risen with average global temperatures, which have been pushed higher by a blanket of carbon pollution smothering Earth.
Gareth Redmond-King, of the Energy & Climate Intelligence Unit, a thinktank, said: “Scientists are clear that cutting those emissions to net zero is the only way to halt climate change and limit the danger. But we also know we’ve got more extreme heat coming this year if, as expected, El Niño joins forces with climate change to break more heat records.”
He added: “The Climate Change Committee was clear last week that alongside cutting emissions to net zero, adapting to our already warmed climate is far less costly than dealing with its ever more dangerous impacts.”
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