San Francisco Chronicle

Lawmaker seeks to impeach leader over drug fight

- By Jim Gomez Jim Gomez is an Associated Press writer.

MANILA — A Philippine lawmaker filed an impeachmen­t complaint against President Rodrigo Duterte on Thursday because of the thousands of deaths in his antidrug crackdown and alleged corruption, although the bid faces an uphill battle with Duterte’s allies holding an overwhelmi­ng majority in Congress.

Rep. Gary Alejano’s complaint filed at the House of Representa­tives alleged Duterte violated the constituti­on, committed bribery and corruption, and betrayed the public trust with his actions, including the crackdown that has sparked extrajudic­ial killings and his failure to declare huge bank deposits as required by law.

“We are of the firm belief that President Duterte is unfit to hold the highest office of the land and that impeachmen­t is the legal and constituti­onal remedy to this situation,” said Alejano.

Although opposition lawmakers lack the numbers to impeach Duterte, Alejano said there was a need to stop his “excesses and crimes.” A vote of a third of the House’s more than 290 members is needed to send the complaint to the Senate for trial. More than 260 of House members belong to a pro-Duterte bloc.

“We understand that in terms of numbers we face an uphill battle,” he said. “But precisely, the battle for impeachmen­t must be fought both inside and outside the halls of Congress,” adding public pressure should sway lawmakers to vote rightfully.

“Our role ... is merely to be the gate-openers for those who want to be a part of this historic and moral crusade,” Alejano said.

Alejano cited the more than 8,000 deaths of drug suspects under the crackdown in underscori­ng the urgency of the first impeachmen­t attempt in Duterte’s presidency. Other opposition politician­s have backed calls for such a move.

Presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella suggested the impeachmen­t bid and opposition criticism were possible efforts to destabiliz­e the Duterte administra­tion.

In his complaint, Alejano echoed rights activists’ label of Duterte as a “cheerleade­r” for encouragin­g the “summary executions” of drug suspects in violation of their rights to life and due process.

Duterte has denied he condoned extrajudic­ial killings. He has not responded in detail to the two men’s allegation­s.

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