Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Duterte’s son grilled in drug case

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PHILIPPINE President Rodrigo Duterte’s son has told a Senate inquiry he had no links to a seized shipment of $125m worth of narcotics from China, dismissing as “baseless” allegation­s of his involvemen­t in the drug trade.

Opponents of Rodrigo Duterte, who has conducted a crackdown on a trade he says is destroying the country, say they believe his son Paolo may have helped ease the entry of the drug shipment at the port of Manila, the capital.

“I cannot answer allegation­s based on hearsay,” Paolo Duterte, vice mayor of the southern city of Davao, told the Senate on Thursday.

“My presence here is for the Filipino people and for my fellow Davaoenos whom I serve.”

On Tuesday Duterte said he had told Paolo to attend the Senate investigat­ion if he had nothing to hide, besides advising him not to answer questions and invoke his right to keep silent.

He was referring to the people of Davao, where his father served as mayor for more than two decades before being elected president in 2016. Duterte has repeatedly said he would resign if critics could prove any members of his family were involved in corruption.

Senator Antonio Trillanes, a staunch critic of Duterte, showed the Senate panel photograph­s of Paolo Duterte beside a businessma­n who was behind the shipment in which the alleged drugs were found.

President Duterte’s son-in-law, Manases Carpio, who has also been accused of links to the May drug shipment from China, told the hearing he had no involvemen­t.

Al Jazeera’s Jamila Alindogan, reporting from Manila yesterday, said this was not the first time Duterte’s son has been implicated in drug cases.

“There is government documentat­ion as far back as 2007 showing that Paolo Duterte had been implicated by the drug enforcemen­t agency as one of the drug protectors in Davao city, in their hometown in the southern Philippine­s,” she said.

She said many rights groups who oppose Duterte’s bloody war on drugs are calling out Paolo Duterte and Carpio for their privilege.

“Here at the Senate hearing, the president’s family members are given the chance to explain their side, to read their opening statements, have the best lawyers and basically have due process in court,” our correspond­ent said, pointing out that those who were killed by police officers in impoverish­ed communitie­s were not afforded the same.

“It remains to be seen how this will end and how this will affect the popularity of the president,” she said.

Trillanes said he had intelligen­ce informatio­n from an undisclose­d foreign country that Paolo Duterte was a member of a criminal syndicate, citing as proof a “dragon-like” tattoo with secret digits on his back.

Asked about the tattoo, Duterte said he had one, but declined to describe it, invoking his right to privacy.

Asked by Trillanes if he would allow a photograph to be taken of the tattoo and sent to the US Drug Enforcemen­t Agency to decode the secret digits, Duterte said: “No way”.—Al Jazeera

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