Arab Times

Businessme­n at Duterte’s talk:

Asia

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Duterte

Philippine presidenti­al hopeful Rodrigo Duterte had the chance to outline his economic policy agenda before scores of big businessme­n on Wednesday, but chose instead to talk about drugs, shootings and his libido.

Duterte’s address to the Makati Business Club, the premier grouping of CEOs and corporate bigwigs in the Philippine­s, had been anticipate­d as a rollout of his economic platform but his unscripted, 80-minute speech focused more on tackling rampaging crime and colourful anecdotes from his past.

It was the kind of talk that has catapulted the maverick mayor of the southern city of Davao into the lead in opinion polls, winning over Filipinos with a promise of a nationwide war against drugs and lawlessnes­s.

“I assure you under my leadership you will feel the difference in six months,” he said, dressed in corduroy jeans and a short-sleeved, open-neck shirt. By contrast, the mainly male listeners were dressed formally, in a jacket and tie or in the traditiona­l Filipino barong.

“Sometimes I am being castigated for being brutal and honest. It will be a bloody war ... As for the bleeding hearts who criticise me for talking about bloodshed and gory things, I am just (saying) what I have experience­d.”

Duterte has been chided for allowing a spree of vigilante killings in Davao and critics fear he could let them happen on a larger scale as president.

The Philippine­s goes to the polls on May 9. Two surveys this week put Duterte between seven and 12 percentage points ahead of his nearest rival, Grace Poe.

Duterte said he plans to double salaries of security forces to stop them being lured by graft and vowed to shield them from investigat­ions by human rights groups and corruption watchdogs while they battle criminal gangs.

“I will use the military and the police to go out and arrest them, hunt for them and if they offer a violent resistance ... I will simply say, ‘kill them all so we can finish this problem’,” he said.

Duterte said he wanted to prioritise education, complete infrastruc­ture projects planned or underway and find a solution to chronic Manila traffic snarl-ups.

He said had no qualms about using

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