The Star Malaysia

Champion lifter fears for her life

Female athlete on Duterte list plotting to ‘discredit govt’

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Hidilyn Diaz, the Philippine­s’ first female Olympic medallist, says she fears for her safety after President Rodrigo Duterte’s government named her in a chart claiming to show a plot to undermine his rule as those on the list have frequently ended up dead or in jail.

MANILA: The Philippine­s’ first female Olympic medallist says she fears for her safety after President Rodrigo Duterte’s government named her in a chart claiming to show a plot to undermine his rule.

People called out publicly by the president in the past for perceived wrongdoing­s – frequently in the form of alleged links to the drug trade – have ended up dead or in jail.

The claim targeting weightlift­ing star Hidilyn Diaz surfaced in the closing days of the campaignin­g in midterm elections, which have been marked by flying accusation­s.

“I am shocked. I am concerned for my security as well as that of my parents,” said Diaz, who became her country’s most successful female athlete when she won a silver medal at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

“My mother is terrified because (journalist­s) are interviewi­ng her and she has no idea why,” Diaz tearfully told Philippine television network GMA late on Thursday, adding online trolls are now also going after her.

Diaz, 28, was among dozens named in charts released by a Duterte spokesman on Wednesday which allegedly showed links between people he accused of plotting to “discredit this administra­tion”.

The charts, which did not substantia­te the accusation­s, included the names of opposition politician­s, an exiled communist guerilla leader, journalist­s and others.

They were released in the closing days of a legislativ­e election campaign thick with flying accusation­s, including allegation­s Duterte’s family is tied to the drug trade.

The president has found internatio­nal notoriety for his crackdown on narcotics in which police have killed thousands of alleged dealers and users.

Those accused in the government charts have issued forceful denials, including journalist Maria Ressa, who runs a website critical of Duterte and was arrested twice this year in what press advocates call intimidati­on efforts.

Diaz posted a video on Facebook Thursday of herself tearfully rejecting any involvemen­t in opposing the government.

“Please do not link somebody who is busy making sacrifices for everyone, for the Philippine­s. I am merely doing my best to represent the Philippine­s in weightlift­ing,” she wrote, as she prepares for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Last week Duterte’s spokesman Salvador Panelo put out another chart of opposition leaders and Filipino journalist­s he said were plotting to unseat him.

Panelo avoided issuing an apology to Diaz on Friday, but he minimised her inclusion on the chart and blamed the media.

“There has been a wrong analysis of the diagram by some media outlets,” he said in a statement, adding that led to wrong “conclusion­s” by Diaz.

 ?? — AFP ?? Selling like hot cakes A woman and her child shopping for head scarves on a street in Banda Aceh, Indonesia.
Head scarves for children are popular items with Muslims in the month of Ramadan.
— AFP Selling like hot cakes A woman and her child shopping for head scarves on a street in Banda Aceh, Indonesia. Head scarves for children are popular items with Muslims in the month of Ramadan.
 ?? — Agencies ?? Successful career: (left) Diaz competing during women’s 53kg weightlift­ing event at the 15th Asian Games in Doha and (right) posing with the silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
— Agencies Successful career: (left) Diaz competing during women’s 53kg weightlift­ing event at the 15th Asian Games in Doha and (right) posing with the silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
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