The Philippine Star

Unbowed Leila: Rody a tired, old narcissist

- By JANVIC MATEO

Battered but unbowed, Sen. Leila de Lima came out swinging yesterday at President Duterte.

The President is a “tired, old narcissist” waging psychologi­cal warfare against Filipinos to hide his incompeten­ce and failure, De Lima told a forum that discussed moves to restore the death penalty.

The possible revival of capital punishment, De Lima said, “is nothing more than the veritable desperate last stand” of the President “who likely realizes that his temperamen­t, skills set and parochial approach to governance – which includes his own brand of patronage politics and kumpare system – are ill-suited and, frankly, incapable of finding real and lasting solutions to the problems of the country he swore to serve.”

“To hide his incompeten­ce and failure, his go-to recourse has been to impose ‘final solutions’ upon the very people he was entrusted to serve and protect, hoping that we are stupid and naive enough to mistake the body count for real accomplish­ments,” she told the forum held at the UP College

of Law.

De Lima said the administra­tion is trying to spirituall­y and morally weaken Filipinos to force a culture of death on the people..

More than 5,800 people have been killed in the administra­tion’s war on drugs since July 1 based on data from the Philippine National Police.

The casualties include 2,004 suspected drug offenders supposedly killed in police operations and 3,841 victims of extrajudic­ial or vigilante killings.

With Filipinos getting bombarded each day with news of drug-related killings, a revival of the death penalty is likely to further “desensitiz­e” citizens to violent deaths. Killings reportedly average 38 victims a day.

She also said talk of martial law or the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus under the Duterte administra­tion fits a pattern of “systematic and egregiousl­y manipulati­ve psychologi­cal warfare” against the Filipino people.

The pattern, she said, started with the sowing of discord and divisivene­ss by fostering the “if you are not with us, you are against us” mentality, aided by the rise of cyber-trolling and spreading of fake news.

“Step two, spread fear among the populace through the publicatio­n of unverified drug hit lists that are so notoriousl­y unreliable, they included individual­s who are already dead,” De Lima said.

She said the next steps would be to use the war on drugs to sow greater fear and chip away the people’s expectatio­n of respect and protection for their rights through threats of declaratio­n of national state of emergency or the suspension of writ of habeas corpus.

“Step five, revise the history of Philippine democracy by giving a hero’s burial to the dictator – whose martial law regime saw not just rampant corruption, but also heinous and gross violations of human rights,” De Lima said, warning against the next stage which may pave way for the declaratio­n of martial law.

“All of these things, which by themselves are already far from innocuous, when taken together attain an even greater level of insidiousn­ess that only hints at the true horror that lies in wait for us: they are intended to slowly, but surely break us down,” she added.

No fence sitter

Challengin­g law students and human rights defenders, the senator said there could be no passive observers where there are people dying.

“Are you among those who are already broken down that you are now prepared to surrender your humanity to those who would not just destroy it, but also use it to destroy others? Are you, now, just another cog in this murderous machine?” De Lima asked.

“Can you still stand up and say that you are not your government? Or are you ready to accept defeat?”

Underscori­ng her opposition to death penalty, the senator said that capital punishment is not a deterrent to crime but is actually a tool for political oppression and suppressio­n.

She said Filipinos patriots like Andres and Procopio Bonifacio, Jose Rizal, Chief Justice Jose Abad Santos, and Wenceslao Vinzons were among the victims of death penalty.

“The death penalty was never as much an effective instrument of justice, as it has been a horrifying­ly potent weapon for the politicall­y and militarily powerful to wield against those they seek to oppress and subjugate,” she said.

“It isn’t enough for them to rewrite our past, they want us to write our future in our own blood,” the senator said.

De Lima is facing various criminal and administra­tive complaints before the Senate, the Department of Justice, and the Supreme Court (SC) for her alleged links to drug trade at the New Bilibid Prison.

Duterte had accused her of protecting drug lords, who allegedly bankrolled her senatorial campaign.

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