The Sun (Malaysia)

‘Duterte’s health condition not serious’

> Biopsy negative for cancer: Acting minister

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte ( pix) does not have cancer, the acting interior minister said yesterday, after the firebrand leader underwent tests in a private hospital.

The public has been clamouring for informatio­n about Duterte’s health after the 73-year-old missed two official events last week.

“He disclosed to us that the result of the test was negative, the one where they took samples from his intestines,” Eduardo Ano told reporters in an event posted on Facebook live by domestic news agencies.

Ano said Duterte made the disclosure during a cabinet meeting on Monday night.

The president made an unschedule­d visit to a hospital when doctors asked him to repeat digestive tract procedures three weeks after similar tests.

Duterte’s condition “is not serious” and will remain a confidenti­al matter, his spokesman, Harry Roque, told a separate news briefing, declining either to confirm or deny the prior remarks of the acting interior minister.

“The president will abide by the constituti­on, but because it is not serious, he will treat his medical condition as confidenti­al,” he said.

Roque declined to give details of the test results and Duterte’s health.

“Let us wait for his disclosure. Anything that is confidenti­al can be waived by the person alone.”

The Philippine constituti­on provides for the public to be told of the state of health of an incumbent president, if serious.

If the leader dies in office, permanentl­y disabled or removed through impeachmen­t, the vicepresid­ent succeeds to serve out the rest of a six-year, single term. Vice-President Leni Robredo, an opposition leader, was elected separately in 2016 and could fuel uncertaint­y in the succession process.

Duterte’s health was a constant source of speculatio­n after he disappeare­d from public view for a week last year but his aides dismissed rumours. – Reuters

 ??  ?? ... This handout picture released by the French Navy, Marine Nationale, shows two cargo ships after they collided off the Mediterran­ean island of Corsica on Sunday. French and Italian ships are trying to contain a spreading oil spill after the Tunisian freighter (left) rammed into the Cyprus-based vessel that was anchored 30km off the northern tip of the French island. The ship’s hull was pierced and at least one fuel tank began leaking into the nearby Cap Corse and Agriate marine reserve.
... This handout picture released by the French Navy, Marine Nationale, shows two cargo ships after they collided off the Mediterran­ean island of Corsica on Sunday. French and Italian ships are trying to contain a spreading oil spill after the Tunisian freighter (left) rammed into the Cyprus-based vessel that was anchored 30km off the northern tip of the French island. The ship’s hull was pierced and at least one fuel tank began leaking into the nearby Cap Corse and Agriate marine reserve.
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