Bangkok Post

Pacquiao ‘tried all kinds of drugs’

Ex-boxer backs ally Duterte’s war on crime

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MANILA: Philippine­s boxing icon Emmanuel “Manny” Pacquiao says he took all kinds of drugs as a teenager but fully supports President Rodrigo Duterte, whose vicious anti-drugs campaign has led to the killing of more than 3,000 people, mostly users and pushers, in three months.

Mr Pacquiao, now a senator and a close ally of the president, also said Mr Duterte was anointed by God to discipline the Filipino people and his authority must be respected.

“The president, he doesn’t know my experience with drugs,” said Mr Pacquiao, 37, adding he was confident it wouldn’t damage their close relationsh­ip.

“He always gives a chance to people who want to be changed,” said the boxerturne­d-lawmaker in an interview in his senate office.

“I tried drugs ... many kinds of drugs, all kinds of drugs,” he said, dressed in the traditiona­l white Filipino barong shirt and trousers.

Mr Pacquiao said this phase lasted for years “before I became a champion”.

Mr Duterte, who took office on June 30, has made the war on drugs the central part of his presidency, saying narcotics are destroying the nation of 100 million people. A total of 3,171 people have been killed since then, including users and pushers, nearly two-thirds by unknown assailants and the rest in legitimate police operations, according to police.

The friendship between the boxer known as “The Destroyer” and the president known as “The Punisher” dates back at least 15 years as Mr Pacquiao tells it, to a boxing ring in Davao, where Mr Duterte helped organise one of his fights.

“He helped me a lot. He helped me with the promotion when I started in boxing. One of my fights held in Davao, he sponsored it,” said Mr Pacquiao, a southpaw who has been an eight-division world champion. “He helped with the promotion, financiall­y as well.”

Mr Pacquiao has the initials of a group called Guardians Mindanao Brotherhoo­d tattooed on his wrist, as does Mr Duterte, according to media reports. “It’s a fraternity,” Mr Pacquiao said.

Guardians Brotherhoo­d started as a soldiers group that was later disbanded.

Mr Pacquiao was born in the town of Kibawe in the Mindanao region of the southern Philippine­s, about 80km from Davao city, where Mr Duterte was mayor and congressma­n since 1988.

His family was dirt-poor, and, according to his autobiogra­phy, the family lived in a thatched hut. His father harvested coconuts and his mother sold peanuts.

Mr Pacquiao did odd jobs to survive and stowed away on a boat to Manila as a teenager, where he started competitiv­e boxing.

According to Forbes, he has earned $500 million (about 17 trillion baht) from purses, pay-per-view and endorsemen­ts so far in his career.

Mr Pacquiao could not recall his first meeting with Mr Duterte but said it was when he was 22 or 23. Since then, Mr Pacquiao said they had frequently met for meals and that he is a godfather to Mr Duterte’s grandson.

Even now, Mr Pacquiao says, Mr Duterte often calls after a fight to congratula­te him.

Mr Pacquiao calls the president by his nickname, Digong, a play on his first name, Rodrigo.

“He’s a very nice person, a nice guy,” Mr Pacquiao said, adding that the president was totally unlike the popular perception that he was foul-mouthed and aggressive. “He is a respectful person, a hospitable person, a friendly person.”

He said blaming the killings on the president was unfair because it was drug lords and drug pushers who were killing one other.

“God put him there for a reason, for purpose: to discipline the people,” he said, adding that the people had to respect the authority and “the anointed one”.

Mr Pacquiao supported Jejomar Binay, a rival of Mr Duterte, in the presidenti­al campaign, but switched allegiance to Mr Duterte later. Now he is one of the president’s closest allies and one of his first acts in the senate was to file a bill to reinstate the death penalty for drug-related and serious crimes, one of Mr Duterte’s key plans.

Last week, Mr Pacquiao helped sideline one of Mr Duterte’s most outspoken critics, fellow Sen Leila De Lima, by leading a motion to oust her as the chair of a highprofil­e committee examining the president’s links to vigilante death squads in Davao during his time as mayor.

“It’s not my intention to remove her from the chairmansh­ip of the committee to stop the investigat­ion,” Mr Pacquiao said. “The investigat­ion will continue. We just want to implement it in the right way.”

“In the past administra­tions, people didn’t respect the law, the leader, the authoritie­s,” he said.

“What Duterte is trying to do is let the people know — and put it in their hearts and minds — that you need to respect the law of the land.”

Mr Pacquiao then left for a training session. Often described as the best poundfor-pound boxer in the world, he has come out of retirement to challenge World Boxing Organisati­on welterweig­ht champion Jessie Vargas in November.

 ?? EPA ?? Filipino boxing champion and Emmanuel Manny ‘Pacman’ Pacquiao, right, and wife Jinkee Jamora-Pacquiao with President Rodrigo Duterte in May.
EPA Filipino boxing champion and Emmanuel Manny ‘Pacman’ Pacquiao, right, and wife Jinkee Jamora-Pacquiao with President Rodrigo Duterte in May.

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