Duterte feeds martial law fear
Philippine leader reignites concerns of potential Marcos era dictatorship
MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte warned he may impose martial law and suspend elections for tens of thousands of local posts, fuelling concerns about democracy under his rule.
Duterte said he was considering both measures as part of his controversial campaign to eradicate illegal drugs in society, and that martial law would also solve a range of other security threats.
“If I declare martial law, I will finish all the problems, not just drugs,” Duterte told reporters on yesterday, in a pre-dawn briefing after returning from neighbouring Thailand, which is under military rule.
Duterte said as part of martial law, he may create military courts to hear cases against terrorists.
“I will allow the military to try and put you to death by hanging,” he said, referring to Islamic militants in the south of the country.
Since easily winning presidential elections last year and taking office nine months ago, Duterte has given conflicting statements on whether he intended to impose military rule.
The issue is highly sensitive in the Philippines, which is still trying to build a strong democracy three decades after a famous “People Power” revolution ended Ferdinand Marcos’s dictatorship.
Duterte also said he was planning to appoint leaders of more than 42,000 districts, known as barangays, across the nation instead of having them elected in polls that were scheduled for October.
“We are looking for a way to just appoint the barangay captains,” Duterte said, adding this was necessary because so many of them were involved in drug trafficking.
“Narco-politics has entered the mainstream of Philippine politics,” Duterte said.
The elections, which by law should be held every three years, are important to the Philippines’ democracy because the barangays are the smallest government unit responsible for services such as health clinics.
Duterte won the presidential elections after running a law-andorder focused campaign in which he promised to eradicate drugs in society by killing tens of thousands of criminals. — AFP