Arab News

President’s lawyer hits out at ‘baseless propaganda’

- Popular mandate

MANILA: An opposition lawmaker has filed an impeachmen­t complaint in the Philippine Congress on Thursday against President Rodrigo Duterte, calling for his removal for what he said were high crimes, betrayal of public trust and abuses of power.

Lower house representa­tive Gary Alejano accused Duterte of a laundry list of what he said were impeachabl­e offenses, from conflicts of interest and assets concealmen­t to drugs-related extrajudic­ial killings and operating a “death squad” during the 22 years he was Davao City mayor.

Duterte’s lawyer, Salvador Panelo, called it baseless “black propaganda,” adding the impeachmen­t bid “will not fly, nor will it make a dent on the overwhelmi­ng popularity” of the president.

Alejano said his aim was to give Filipinos a chance to speak up against a powerful president who had oversteppe­d the mark.

“Our goal with this complaint is to be a vehicle for Filipinos to have a voice to oppose and fight against the abuses and crimes of President Duterte,” Alejano told a televised news conference.

“We know it is an uphill battle ... but we believe that many will support this.”

The impeachmen­t effort is the first against Duterte since he took office eight months ago. Former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo survived five such motions.

Duterte has few powerful opponents and challenges against him have come from the same people. Though the allegation­s are serious and attract media attention, none have stuck. Critics say the lack of dissent is due to a climate of fear that has prevailed under the popular, no-nonsense leader, who is defended fiercely by his huge online support base.

The government often cites his high approval rating and his electoral mandate in rebuffing internatio­nal criticism about his bloody war on drugs, during which more than 8,000 people have been killed.

About 2,500 of those were in police raids and sting operations and the authoritie­s vigorously deny involvemen­t in thousands of mysterious killings of drug users.

Alejano accused Duterte of having a state policy of killing drug suspects and a “culpable violation of the constituti­on, engaging in bribery, betrayal of public trust, graft and corruption and other high crimes.”

Presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella said the move was part of a wider plot to undermine the Duterte administra­tion.

“It seems rather dramatic that everything seems to be so coordinate­d at this stage,” said Abella.

“It looks like they are scraping the bottom of the barrel.”

Duterte has been fast consolidat­ing power in the bicameral Congress and Alejano accepted his impeachmen­t bid may not get much traction. He submitted it just as Congress goes into a six-week recess.

He wants the complaint to embolden the church, civil society, academia and Filipinos who did not vote for Duterte or favor his policies to know they can take on the president.

“We know the numbers are against us, and we are facing a big challenge,” he said.

Lower house speaker and Duterte ally Pantaleon Alvarez said Alejano would fail, but should still be allowed to exercise his rights.

“We are all entitled to our own stupidity,” he added.

 ??  ?? Opposition activists have cited the more than 8,000 deaths of drug suspects in underscori­ng the urgency of their action against President Rodrigo Duterte. (Reuters)
Opposition activists have cited the more than 8,000 deaths of drug suspects in underscori­ng the urgency of their action against President Rodrigo Duterte. (Reuters)

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