Fiji Sun

We Now Have Evidence, Says Duterte Amidst Claims Opposition Planning Coup

Philippine President did not say which country tipped him off about alleged plot, which accused lawmakers deny.

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Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has detailed what he said was a plot to unseat him hatched by the opposition, Maoist rebels and a group of former soldiers who had mounted failed coups in the past.

In a conversati­on with his lawyer, shown on national television, Mr Duterte said he had asked the military to “declassify” informatio­n about the plot which he said was gathered by a third country he did not identify.

“We have the evidence and we have the conversati­on provided by a foreign country sympatheti­c to us,” Mr Duterte told Salvador Panelo, presidenti­al legal counsel, in an hour-long conversati­on.

He said the Communists, politician­s opposed to him and a group of ex-servicemen, including a senator he wanted arrested after revoking his amnesty, “were in constant communicat­ion”. Mr Duterte said the “connection will be shown, maybe any day now”.

Last week, Mr Duterte withdrew a 2010 amnesty granted to his most vocal critic, Senator Antonio Trillanes, a former junior naval officer who led two unsuccessf­ul coup attempts in 2003 and 2007 against the President at the time, Gloria Arroyo, and ordered his arrest. Mr Trillanes’ party-mate, Congressma­n Gary Alejano, who also took part in the failed coups, denied the President’s accusation­s they were plotting his removal, saying they were only doing their work as “members of the opposition under the checks and balance system of our democratic government”.

Mr Alejano said the President was trying to “divert the attention of the people from the present economic woes they themselves have failed to address”.

Mr Duterte also warned soldiers against “colluding” with Trillanes’ group as coup rumours swirled in the capital early on Tuesday after army trucks and armoured vehicles were seen rolling down Manila’s main roads.

The military quickly denied there were “sizeable movements of military aircraft or armoured vehicle”. “There is no cause for alarm,” military spokespers­on Marine Colonel Edgard Arevalo told reporters, adding these were “routine movements that are properly co-ordinated”.

Opposition Senator Risa Hontiveros responded that Duterte “should snap out of his fantasy with destabilis­ation plots, roll up his sleeves and start working”.

 ??  ?? Rodrigo Duterte.
Rodrigo Duterte.

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