The Star Malaysia

War on drugs – no stopping Duterte

Philippine leader vows unrelentin­g fight despite mounting pressure.

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MANILA: President Rodrigo Duterte vowed to press on with his controvers­ial drug war that has claimed thousands of lives, as he outlined his vision of an “eye-for-an-eye” justice system.

Duterte devoted large chunks of his annual State of the Nation Address to pushing his law-andorder policies that have made him hugely popular with many Filipinos but condemned by human rights groups and other critics.

“No matter how long it takes, the fight against illegal drugs will continue because that is the root cause of so much evil and so much suffering,” Duterte told lawmakers from both houses of Congress.

“The fight will be unrelentin­g despite internatio­nal and local pressures, the fight will not stop until those who deal in it understand that they have to cease, they have to stop because the alternativ­es are either jail or hell.”

Duterte swept to victory in last year’s presidenti­al elections after promising an unpreceden­ted crackdown on illegal drugs in which he said tens of thousands of people would die.

Since he took office on June 30 last year, police have reported killing nearly 3,200 people in the drug war.

More than 2,000 other people have been killed in drug-related crimes, according to police data.

Rights groups say many of those victims have been killed by vigilante death squads linked to the government.

Duterte also urged lawmakers to reintroduc­e the death penalty.

“I ask Congress to act on legislatio­n to reimpose the death penalty on heinous crimes, especially illegal drug traffickin­g,” Duterte said yesterday.

He emphasised that capital punishment was about “retribu- tion” as much as deterrence.

“In the Philippine­s, it is really an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth. You took a life, you must pay for it and die,” he said. “That is the only way to get even.” The lower house of Congress this year passed a bill to bring back the death penalty, but the Senate has yet to approve it.

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 ?? — Reuters ?? A loud no: Protesters displaying an effigy of Duterte during a march towards the Philippine Congress ahead of the president’s State of the Nation address in Quezon city, Manila.
— Reuters A loud no: Protesters displaying an effigy of Duterte during a march towards the Philippine Congress ahead of the president’s State of the Nation address in Quezon city, Manila.

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