Manila Bulletin

Duterte admits to ‘perpetual pain’ from accident, is certain of long life

- GENALYN D. KABILING

President Duterte is battling "perpetual pain" from a motorcycle accident years ago but is certain that he still has a long life ahead of him.

In his first public appearance in Cebu City since allegation­s he fell into a coma circulated over the weekend, the President assured the public that he was just "resting" in his hometown Davao City for the past few days.

"Comatose, comatose ka diyan... comatose, matagal pa ako [I still have a long life ahead of me]," Duterte said in his two-hour speech before an assembly of mayors from Visayas in Cebu City last Tuesday night.

Duterte however admitted he has been in constant spinal pain after a bad motorcycle fall several years ago. Since the incident, Duterte said he has difficulty riding airplanes because he becomes dizzy.

"I have a C4 and C7 na nag-impinge. That’s why I am in perpetual pain. On the --- on any day, it’s seven in a scale of 10," he said.

Duterte said his doctors have advised him against frequently taking painkiller­s. "Sabi niya [He said] 'You better come to terms with your body,'" he said.

The President made the admission about his spinal pain amid persistent speculatio­ns he was in poor health. Communist leader Jose Maria Sison earlier alleged that Duterte had fallen into coma, citing reports about his weakness during a public engagement in Davao City last weekend.

Duterte however denied Sison's claim, saying it was the communist rebel, currently living in exile in the Netherland­s, who was afflicted with cancer.

He also threatened to confront Sison in the Netherland­s to show who was really sick between them.

"Tignan natin. Pag magpunta ako diyan, turista lang. Galing ako Israel. Tignan natin kung sinong --- comatose [Leet's see. I'll go there, just a tourist. I'll come from Israel. Let's see who is really in comatose],” said Duterte, who is scheduled to visit Israel and Jordan next month.

Duterte also said Sison was a "freeloader" and a "discredite­d leader" who has been in and out of the hospital.

"Mr. Sison, you are a refugee in that country. You are availing of the funds of the Norwegian people. You do not pay anything. You are staying there for free. And you are sick with cancer, in and out of the hospital," he said.

He also urged Sison, his former professor, to leave the Netherland­s and find another place of refuge like Belgium or Germany. Norway is the third-party facilitato­r of the peace talks between the government and the communist rebel group.

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