Philippine Daily Inquirer

Duterte says he killed amanat 16; joke again?

- By Philip C. Tubeza @pctubezaIN­Q

Da Nang, Vietnam—President Duterte said he had stabbed someone to death when he was just 16 years old, but his spokespers­on said his claim may have been a joke.

The deed was brought up when he spoke on Thursday night to members of the Filipino community in Da Nang, Vietnam, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) summit, where he said he was not afraid to go to prison for his war on drugs because he was familiar with jails in his teens when he was involved in many street fights.

“When I was a teenager, I was in and out of jail,” he said. “At the age of 16, I had killed someone. It was really a person. (It was during a) rumble. (It was a) stabbing. That was when I was 16 years old.”

“It was just an exchange of dirty looks. What more today when I am President,” he added, eliciting laughter from the audience.

Mr. Duterte’s aides have repeatedly told journalist­s not to believe everything he says, cautioning that he often jokes or indulges in “hyperbole.”

His new spokespers­on, Harry Roque, indicated that maybe the case with his stabbing-to-death claim.

‘In jest’

“I think it was in jest. The President uses colorful language when with Pinoys overseas,” Roque said in a text message.

Esquire magazine had quoted Mr. Duterte as saying in an interview before he became President that he may have stabbed someone to death when he was 17 years old.

The then Davao City mayor was asked if he remembered the first time he had killed a man.

“Well, when I was young … I was 17,” Mr. Duterte replied. “There was a tumultuous fight on the beach. We were young men then and we went to this beach and wewere drinking and suddenly there was this … maybe I stabbed somebody to death … something like that.”

Mr. Duterte, known for his brash sense of humor and foul language, has told journalist­s that if he made “a prepostero­us statement, do not believe it.”

“If I say something like that, don’t buy it. If the answer is prepostero­us or ridiculous, whisper to the one next to you from the Davao media and check if I’m serious,” Duterte said at a news conference shortly after last year’s election. He added that he enjoyed “playing around” and “bantering” with reporters.

But in Thursday’s meeting with Filipinos at Da Nang’s Pulchra Resort, the President was discussing one of his administra­tion’s serious priorities—ending the drug menace.

He reiterated his position that he would continue to go after drug suspects despite protests from human rights activists.

“You fuck with my countrymen, I will not let you go,” he said. “If you make the life of the Filipinos miserable, it is as if you are consigning them to hell alive.”

However, Mr. Duterte said he would not allow extrajudic­ial killings in his antidrug campaign and would not condone the killing of a defenseles­s person.

‘I will never do it’

“If you are talking of a man whose hands are tied behind his back or kneeling down with outstretch­ed arms in surrender, and then you say I committed murder, you are crazy. I will never do it,” he said.

More than 3,800 people, who allegedly fought officers during raids, have been killed by the police in the antidrug campaign since Mr. Duterte took office 16 months ago. Thousands more were killed by unknown assailants.

Critics at home and abroad have warned that Mr. Duterte was orchestrat­ing a campaign of extrajudic­ial mass murder, carried out by corrupt police and hired vigilantes.

He at times denies inciting police or others to kill, but also consistent­ly generates headlines for his abusive language and incendiary comments defending the drug war.

Last year Mr. Duterte said he would be “happy to slaughter” three million drug addicts and branded then United States president Barack Obama a “son of a whore” for criticizin­g the drug war.

Duterte also said in December last year that he had personally shot dead criminal suspects when he was mayor of southern Davao City to set an example to police.

In Da Nang, Duterte also targeted the United Nations’ special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial killings, Agnes Callamard, who has been a frequent critic of the drug war.

“This rapporteur,” he said, after referring to Callamard by name, “I will slap her in front of you. Why? Because you are insulting me.”

Mr. Duterte’s comments come ahead of him hosting US President Donald Trump and other leaders in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) summit.

Trump has praised Duterte’s handling of the drug war, telling the Philippine leader in a telephone call in April that he was doing a “great job.”

PR coup

Human rights campaigner­s have said the summit will be a public relations coup for Mr. Duterte, with Trump and other leaders expected to ignore the drug war controvers­y.

“Duterte will enjoy the gift of tacit silence from East Asian leaders on his murderous drug war during the upcoming summit,” Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director Phelim Kine told Agence France-Presse.

“The summit messaging will be of feel-good mutual economic win-wins that will ignore the fact that Duterte has inflected a campaign of mass extrajudic­ial killings,” Kine said.

 ?? —MALACAÑANG­PHOTO ?? President Duterte with Filipinos in Da Nang, Vietnam.
—MALACAÑANG­PHOTO President Duterte with Filipinos in Da Nang, Vietnam.
 ??  ?? Agnes Callamard “This rapporteur, I will slap her.”
Agnes Callamard “This rapporteur, I will slap her.”

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