Business World

President revives anew martial law talk

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PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte warned Thursday he may impose martial law and suspend elections for tens of thousands of local posts, fueling concerns about democracy under his rule.

Mr. Duterte said he was considerin­g both measures as part of his controvers­ial campaign to eradicate illegal drugs in society, and that martial law would solve a range of other security threats.

“If I declare martial law, I will finish all the problems, not just drugs,” he told reporters in a pre-dawn briefing after returning from neighborin­g Thailand, which is under military rule.

Mr. Duterte said that, as part of martial law, he may create military courts to hear cases against terrorists.

“I will allow the military to try you 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, Mr. 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 the 1986 People Power Revolution ended Ferdinand E. Marcos’s dictatorsh­ip.

Mr. Duterte has previously warned he would be prepared to defy constituti­onal safeguards and restrictio­ns on martial law, although he and his aides have later sought to downplay those threats.

On Thursday, he gave an emphatic case for martial law, saying it would stop the Philippine­s from “exploding.”

“I will be harsh,” Duterte said as he described his approach to military rule.

‘RASH DECISION’

Mr. 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,” Mr. Duterte said, adding this was necessary because 40% of them were involved in drug traffickin­g.

“Narco-politics has entered the mainstream of Philippine politics.”

But in a statement, opposition Senator Francis N. Pangilinan warned: “It is worrisome that the President should even contemplat­e such a rash decision that encroaches dangerousl­y into authoritar­ian ideologies reminiscen­t of those harbored and exemplifie­d by the former dictator Ferdinand Marcos.”

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 a wide range of local services.

Barangay officials also help to monitor communitie­s for illegal drugs and draw up the lists of trafficker­s or addicts. Police use those lists for raids that frequently lead to suspects being killed.

Mr. Duterte won the presidenti­al elections after promising during the campaign to eradicate drugs in society by killing tens of thousands of criminals.

Police have reported killing nearly 2,600 people in his drug war while rights groups say thousands more have been killed in a state-sanctioned campaign of mass murder.

Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch have warned Mr. Duterte may be guilty of a crime against humanity.

‘TRIAL BALLOON’

Local opponents have said they are planning to file a case against Mr. Duterte with the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, and a lawmaker last week filed an impeachmen­t complaint against him in Congress.

Mr. Duterte is extremely popular with many Filipinos fed up with crime and he has a commanding majority in Congress, meaning the impeachmen­t case is unlikely to prosper.

One of his fiercest critics, Senator Antonio F. Trillanes IV, said Mr. Duterte’s latest comments on martial law plus the barangay elections were part of a campaign to get the public used to the idea of military rule.

“It’s some form of trial balloon and at the same time mind-conditioni­ng. He will keep on pushing the boundaries until he feels he is able to get it (martial law) through,” Mr. Trillanes told AFP.

Mr. Duterte’s critics have said he is underminin­g democracy on a wide range of other fronts, including sidelining the justice system in the drug war.

But Mr. Duterte, 71, has repeatedly said he does not want to hold on to power and that he respects democracy.

The 1987 Constituti­on, written by an appointed body after the fall of Mr. Marcos and approved in a plebiscite that year, limits presidents to a single term of six years. —

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