The Niagara Falls Review

Duterte offers bounty on rebels

- JIM GOMEZ

MANILA, Philippine­s — The Philippine president offered a nearly $500 bounty for each communist rebel killed by government forces to save on anti-insurgency costs and said insurgents are easier to hit than birds because they have bigger heads.

President Rodrigo Duterte’s latest remarks, which the government issued to reporters late Wednesday, came after human rights groups condemned him this week for saying troops should shoot female communist guerrillas in the genitals to render them “useless.”

“You kill an NPA today and I’ll pay you 25,000” pesos, Duterte said in a speech at an air base in central Cebu city, referring to New People’s Army (NPA) guerrillas.

“I was computing that if this drags on for four years ... it’ll be very expensive because it’s war. If I’ll just pay 25,000 ($500) for a life, I can save about 47 per cent,” he said to laughter from the crowd.

There was no elaboratio­n on how he came up with those figures and whether or how the government would pay for claimed kills. Backing up his offer, the brash-talking president encouraged state forces to go for the kill.

“If you work really hard to crawl across the forest, you’ll surely be able to shoot even just one. If you can shoot a bird above you, then how much more an NPA whose head is so big?” Duterte said, again eliciting laughter from the crowd.

Regional rebel commander Jaime Padilla, who uses the nom de guerre Ka Diego, said Duterte wouldn’t scare the guerrillas into ending their uprising even if he offers a million pesos ($2,400) for each rebel killed because the rebellion has been fuelled by deep social ills such as poverty for nearly a century.

“These are not remarks of a sane president,” Padilla said by telephone. “These are words of a thug or a goon, who reigns like a king in our country.”

He said the guerrillas remain open to resuming stalled talks with the administra­tion despite the president’s “fascist” style.

Duterte is under internatio­nal criticism and facing a preliminar­y investigat­ion by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court for thousands of deaths in the war on drugs he initiated after becoming president two years ago.

 ?? NOEL CELIS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, above, is offering a $500 bounty on communist rebels in the country.
NOEL CELIS/GETTY IMAGES Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, above, is offering a $500 bounty on communist rebels in the country.

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