The Philippine Star

‘AFP, PNP solidly behind Duterte’

- BY JAIME LAUDE

The military is solidly behind the administra­tion of President Duterte and his challengin­g soldiers to join the forces allegedly plotting his ouster – including arch critic Sen. Antonio Trillanes – was simply a show of confidence in their loyalty, defense chief Delfin Lorenzana said yesterday.

“What I see in him is that he’s very comfortabl­e with the support of the military and the police. I feel it that way. I think it’s just a dare,” Lorenzana said on the sidelines of the awarding of US Congressio­nal Gold Medal to 13 Filipino World War II veterans at the US embassy compound.

On Tuesday, in a one-onone televised interview with his chief legal adviser Salvador Panelo, Duterte went about his usual tirade against Trillanes and challenged soldiers to join forces with Trillanes and the Magdalo group and launch a coup. He claimed the Liberal Party and the Communist Party of the Philippine­s are part of the plot.

Lorenzana said the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) and the Philippine National Police (PNP) are stable institutio­ns, satisfied with the way the President is running the country. The PNP is under the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG).

On Duterte’s allegation that his political foes are recruiting active soldiers to join a destabiliz­ation plot, Lorenzana said such report is under validation.

“I cannot confirm that because there is none (recruitmen­t) that I have monitored,” Lorenzana said.

He added that any ouster plot couldn’t succeed without the support of the military.

The President ordered Trillanes’ arrest by voiding his amnesty through Presidenti­al Proclamati­on 572 early this month, citing flaws in his applicatio­n for amnesty as well as the senator’s alleged failure to show remorse for the Oakwood mutiny in 2003 and the Manila Peninsula siege in 2007.

Legal luminaries and administra­tion critics have criticized the proclamati­on as unconstitu­tional.

Trillanes has been under Senate custody since early this month to escape a warrantles­s arrest.

For presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque Jr., the President’s challengin­g the military to launch a coup should be seen only as his way of discrediti­ng Trillanes.

“As I said, I think the proper context is that he’s making the challenge because he’s sure they won’t get support,” Roque said.

“But he’s saying ‘I’m not clinging to this position. Do whatever you want to do,’” Roque said.

“But I think the President, by saying so, remains confident that there is no threat to his administra­tion,” he pointed out.

Roque said the President was also expressing his confidence the military would never collude with communist groups to have him ousted.

Vice President Leni Robredo expressed belief the AFP would remain “loyal to the Constituti­on” amid President Duterte’s repeated challenge for its officers and men to oust him.

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