The Freeman

Duterte decries EJK tag: 'I've been demonized'

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MANILA — Amid mounting criticisms over the spate of killings under his deadly drug war, President Rodrigo Duterte yesterday maintained he has never encouraged extrajudic­ial killings and decried being “demonized” by his critics.

“I know that I have been demonized and well, of course, I will assure you upon my oath as a lawyer and before God that some are true and some are not,” Duterte said in his speech before Southeast Asian justices, judges and lawyers in an event in Malacañan.

“The extrajudic­ial tag that has been placed on me is simply not true,” he added.

But on the same occasion, Duterte threatened anew to kill suspected drug personalit­ies should they continue to get involved in narco-traffickin­g.

“I will kill you, make no mistake about it, I will kill you,” he remarked.

Duterte—who easily won the race to Malacañang last year on a promise to use deadly force to wipe out crime and drugs—has stoked internatio­nal alarm for activating his fierce anti-drug campaign.

Human rights watchdogs said most of the fatalities are extrajudic­ial killings committed by cops and unknown assailants—a claim that the government has vehemently denied by insisting that police are only killing in self-defense while gangsters are silencing potential witnesses.

Filipinos have mostly backed Duterte’s drug war even as critics condemned the wave of killings. But the recent deaths of three teenagers in the country’s capital have triggered rare street protests and highlighte­d concerns about alleged police abuse.

According to Duterte, the country’s drug problem flourished during the time of former presidents Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Benigno Aquino III. But he said it was only during Aquino’s presidency when the country turned into a “narco-state.”

He also reiterated his reminder to police to only pull the trigger when their life is in danger, adding that based on his experience as Davao City mayor, all drug suspects possess guns and are violently resisting arrests.

While admitting that there had been killings in the brutal crackdown, Duterte also slammed his political opponents whom he accused of spreading “fake news” regarding the death toll in the anti-drug campaign.

“Most of the victims who were killed and according to the bright guys of this country and the political opposition — the guys who cannot accept defeat — they invented the fake news and concocted figures,” Duterte said.

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