Bangkok Post

Philippine­s VP to take on ‘poisoned chalice’ role

Robredo’s move to co-chair drug war panel could take her down the road to failure, writes Martin Petty

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The last time aides of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte sent a text message to his vice president, it was to tell her to stay away from his cabinet meetings. But after three years in the cold, Leni Robredo is being welcomed back to Mr Duterte’s cabinet as his “czar” in a war on drugs in which thousands of people have been killed. Ms Robredo, a 54-year-old who was elected separately to Mr Duterte, has called the campaign ineffectiv­e and out of control.

“We don’t even know the numbers anymore. We do not know how many died because of the drugs war because government has not been transparen­t,” she said last month.

Ms Robredo’s allies see the job offer — to co-chair an inter-government panel on drugs along with the head of the anti-drugs agency — as a “poisoned chalice”. They say she is being set up to fail, a play to humiliate one of Mr Duterte’s few remaining rivals to challenge his popular autocracy ahead of 2022 elections.

Ms Robredo has however accepted the job, possibly setting her on a collision course with the president. “They are asking me if I am ready for this job. My question is: Are you ready for me?” Ms Robredo said.

In the Oct 23 interview, she said abusive police should be stopped, and the United Nations be allowed to conduct its investigat­ion into allegation­s of systematic executions and cover-ups by police.

The Duterte administra­tion rejects that as foreign interferen­ce based on lies and distortion, and backs the police. Ms Robredo is facing possible sedition charges alongside 35 other opponents of Mr Duterte, among them lawyers, priests, lawmakers and a former attorney general, which some officials say could result in a second impeachmen­t attempt against her.

Mr Duterte has publicly threatened activists, a UN special rapporteur, a UN human rights chief, and an internatio­nal war crimes prosecutor, and called the Philippine­s’ top human rights official a paedophile.

Other targets include a senator who has been in police detention since 2017 on drugs charges after her Senate investigat­ion into drug war killings. Another senator was charged with kidnapping, and a Supreme Court Chief Justice who opposed some of Mr Duterte’s policies was removed.

According to Antonio Tinio, a unionist and former congressma­n, Ms Robredo’s appointmen­t is part of moves to discredit those who could complicate the succession of Mr Duterte, who is restricted to only one six-year term.

“Duterte is very aware that if someone from outside of his camp is elected president it’s very likely he will end up in jail. It’s about selfpreser­vation,” said Mr Tinio, who was last year charged with child abuse after the president’s daughter posted pictures on Instagram of minors attending his political rally.

“As vice president, she has the stature, she’s respected by the internatio­nal community and that’s why Duterte at the moment is paying attention to what she says.”

Ms Robredo said she was yet to decide whether she would run in 2022 for the presidency, a contest typically won on personalit­y rather than party or policy.

A former human rights lawyer, she was thrust into politics after her husband, then interior secretary Jesse Robredo, was killed in a 2012 plane crash. She has three daughters. By challengin­g the hugely popular Duterte, Ms Robredo has had a rough ride, subjected to what she says is an organised campaign of online trolling and fabricated news stories that she said originates from influencer­s linked to government.

The worst, she said, were abuses and sexual harassment of her and her daughters.

“In the age of fake news, in the age of trolls, it is difficult to be a woman politician, especially like me who doesn’t have a husband,” Ms Robredo said. “Somebody like me is an open target. I am very vulnerable.”

Ms Robredo likened the crackdown on dissent to the martial law era of late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, demonstrat­ing a slide towards authoritar­ianism, and a climate of fear.

“We see a very strong, very popular leader who is trying to take advantage of the popularity by trying to stifle the opposition, and trying to weaken the institutio­ns,” she said.

She added: “There are very, very few of us that are speaking out”. During the interview, Ms Robredo said Mr Duterte’s bellicose rhetoric was encouragin­g police abuses in a drugs war that had spiralled out of control.

It is unclear whether Ms Robredo will have any power to change that. Presidenti­al spokesman, Salvador Panelo, sidesteppe­d questions about her remit, but yesterday said Mr Duterte was sincere in his support for her.

“People say this will make or break you,” he said. “Prove us wrong in that you can hack it. This is your time.”

‘‘ They are asking me if I am ready for this job. My question is: Are you ready for me?

LENI ROBREDO

VICE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINE­S

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 ??  ?? Duterte: Frequent target of Robredo’s criticism
Duterte: Frequent target of Robredo’s criticism

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