The Philippine Star

Palace on protest: Free expression

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President Duterte upholds freedom of expression, Malacañang stressed yesterday, after thousands of peo- ple joined a Catholic Church-organized rally against extrajudic­ial killings and the revival of the death penalty.

“The President allows the freedom of expression and this is one of them. That’s part of the democratic dynam- ic,” presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella said when asked to comment on the “Walk for Life”

prayer rally held last Saturday.

The event, organized by the Council of the Laity of the Philippine­s and joined by the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippine­s, was held at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila and drew a crowd of more than 10,000 people.

Duterte and the Catholic Church have been clashing over the administra­tion’s bloody war on illegal drugs and its effort to bring back capital punishment.

The President has waged a brutal war against illegal drugs, a problem that he claimed has reached “epidemic proportion­s.”

More than 7,000 suspected drug offenders have died since the intensifie­d anti-drug campaign was launched, alarming Catholic bishops who believe that killing is not the solution to the problem.

Duterte has denied endorsing extrajudic­ial killings but has ordered government forces to shoot drug suspects if they pose any danger to their lives.

The Catholic Church, the religious group of more than 80 percent of Filipinos, is also against the revival of the death penalty, one of the priority bills of the Duterte administra­tion.

The President had said the death penalty is not a deterrent but a retributio­n for wrongdoing. He even threatened to execute five to six drug convicts every day once the bill reviving capital punishment is passed into law.

Angered by the Church’s criticisms against his war on drugs, Duterte had claimed that bishops have no moral ascendancy to lecture him about the sanctity of life because of the corruption and child abuse scandals involving some clergymen.

He had also encouraged the public to maintain a personal relationsh­ip with God without going through Catholic rituals.

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