Shots fired inside Philippine Senate as lawmakers shield senator from ICC arrest

By Ethan Cole on
 May 14, 2026

More than a dozen rounds rang out inside the Philippine Senate on Wednesday night as police and marines pushed into the legislative complex to arrest a sitting senator wanted by the International Criminal Court, a dramatic standoff that has thrown the country's political order into open crisis.

No injuries were reported. But the gunfire sent senators scrambling, reporters ducking, and the nation's top officials into competing accounts of what happened and who was responsible.

At the center of it all: Sen. Ronald "Bato" dela Rosa, the former national police chief who ran the Duterte administration's anti-drug campaign and now faces an ICC warrant charging him with murder as a crime against humanity. Allied senators had been sheltering him inside the building since Monday, when National Bureau of Investigation agents first tried, and failed, to take him into custody.

The warrant and the standoff

The ICC unsealed the arrest warrant on Monday. It had been dated in November. The Daily Caller reported that the warrant charges dela Rosa with murder as a crime against humanity involving "no less than 32 persons" between July 2016 and April 2018, the bloodiest stretch of the Duterte-era drug crackdown that drew global condemnation.

When NBI agents moved on dela Rosa Monday, he allegedly escaped into the plenary hall. Senate President Alan Peter Cayetano, described as a recently installed ally of former President Rodrigo Duterte, said he would seek contempt findings against the agents who entered the chamber.

By Wednesday night, the situation had escalated well beyond a procedural dispute. Police and marines pushed into the legislative complex. Shortly after, gunfire broke out.

Several senators told local media they were unsure who fired the shots.

Cayetano's livestream and competing accounts

Cayetano broadcast from inside the building on Facebook Live. His message carried the weight of a man watching his institution buckle in real time.

"I don't know what is happening. I do not know if I can keep my people safe here."

In a separate statement carried by Newsmax, Cayetano said he had been told by building security that gunshots were fired inside the Senate. He added: "The emotions are high here. This is the Senate of the Philippines and we are allegedly under attack."

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. offered a different version. He said no government forces tried to enter and characterized the incident as a clash between an unidentified armed group and Senate security. He urged the public to stay calm.

That account left basic questions unanswered. If government forces did not enter, who did? And who were the armed men clashing with Senate security?

A suspect detained, warning shots described

Philippine police moved quickly to identify at least one person connected to the shooting. Breitbart reported that authorities detained a suspect on the second floor of the Senate building and recovered live ammunition. The suspect was tested for gunshot residue.

Philippine police spokesman Brigadier-General Randulf Tuano told reporters: "He (suspect) was arrested at the area of the incident, at the second floor of the senate building."

Interior Secretary Jonvic Remulla offered yet another layer. He said Senate security fired warning shots at several unknown armed men on a stairway, after which the gunmen fired into the air and left. Remulla later entered the building and assured dela Rosa that no warrant would be served that night.

Authorities said it was not immediately clear how many people were involved. The Associated Press reported that an investigation including a review of CCTV footage was launched.

The ICC's long reach

The Philippines withdrew from the International Criminal Court under Duterte's administration. But ICC judges retained jurisdiction over conduct between 2016 and 2019, the precise window covering the drug war killings. That jurisdictional carve-out is what allowed the court to pursue dela Rosa even after the country's formal departure.

Duterte himself sits in ICC custody at The Hague after his arrest in March 2025. Dela Rosa referenced that fact in a Facebook video, framing his resistance in nationalist terms.

"We should not allow another Filipino to be brought to The Hague, the second one after President Duterte."

In a separate statement reported by the AP, dela Rosa said: "If I have something to answer for, I will face those in our local courts and not before foreigners."

That argument, sovereignty over international jurisdiction, is one that resonates well beyond the Philippines. It is the same objection raised by the United States, which has never ratified the Rome Statute and has long resisted ICC authority over its own citizens and servicemembers. Whether one supports or opposes the ICC's mandate, the spectacle of armed men trading gunfire inside a national legislature to enforce an international warrant ought to give any sovereign nation pause.

A country fracturing

The Senate standoff did not happen in isolation. The same week, the Philippine House impeached Vice President Sara Duterte, the former president's daughter. The Duterte political dynasty, which dominated Philippine politics for years, now faces simultaneous legal and political offensives on multiple fronts.

Cayetano's threat to pursue contempt findings against NBI agents who entered the Senate on Monday signals that the legislature views the arrest attempt as a violation of its institutional authority. Whether that position holds up legally is an open question. But the political message is clear: a faction of the Philippine Senate is willing to physically obstruct an ICC warrant.

The case bears some resemblance to other high-profile arrests that test the boundaries of law enforcement and institutional authority, though few have produced gunfire inside a sitting legislature.

What remains unclear is whether dela Rosa will ultimately be taken into custody. Remulla's assurance that no warrant would be served Wednesday night bought time, but it did not resolve the underlying conflict. The ICC warrant remains active. The Philippine government appears divided over whether to enforce it.

The questions that matter

Who fired the shots? Marcos says it was an unidentified armed group clashing with Senate security. Remulla says Senate security fired warning shots at armed men on a stairway. Police detained one suspect. Senators say they don't know what happened. These accounts do not fully align, and the CCTV review may or may not settle the matter.

Was the warrant ultimately served? As of the latest reporting, it was not. Dela Rosa remained inside the Senate.

Will the Philippine government cooperate with the ICC going forward? Marcos has urged calm but has not committed to enforcing the warrant. The Senate, or at least a faction of it, has made its position clear through action rather than words.

And perhaps the most uncomfortable question of all: What does it say about international justice when enforcing a warrant requires armed men storming a national legislature, and the result is gunfire, chaos, and a suspect detained on a stairwell?

The ICC was built on the premise that no one is above the law. The Philippine Senate standoff suggests that premise works better on paper than it does when police and marines are trading rounds with unknown gunmen inside a sovereign nation's legislature. International courts can issue all the warrants they want. Enforcing them is another matter entirely, and the cost of trying may be higher than the architects of global justice ever intended.

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