The Star Malaysia

Facing charges

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Arrest warrant out for top Philippine drug war critic Senator Leila de Lima.

MANILA: An arrest warrant was issued for the highest-profile opponent of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s brutal war on drugs, outraging her supporters who said the move was aimed at silencing her.

Senator Leila de Lima (pic), 57, a lawyer who has spent nearly a decade trying to link Duterte to death squads that have allegedly killed thousands of people, faces drug traffickin­g charges that could see her jailed for life.

“I have no plans of fleeing and I have no plans to go into hiding. I will face all these charges,” a tearful De Lima told reporters at the Senate after a Manila court issued the arrest warrant yesterday.

De Lima said that although the warrant had been issued, it had yet to be served on her.

So she planned to spend the night with her loved ones before returning to the Senate today when she will likely be arrested.

She is accused of orchestrat­ing a drug traffickin­g ring when she was justice secretary in the previous administra­tion of Benigno Aquino.

But De Lima and her supporters insist she is innocent, and that the charges are trumped up to silence one of Duterte’s most vocal and enduring critics.

De Lima this week branded Duterte a “sociopathi­c serial killer” as she called for ordinary Filipinos to stand up in opposition to his drug war, which has seen more than 6,500 people killed since he took office.

She said Duterte was mentally unfit to be president and called for the Cabinet to unseat him, while referring to the “People Power” rev- olution that overthrew dictator Ferdinand Marcos in 1986.

De Lima’s Liberal Party, which ruled for six years under Aquino, voiced deep anger yesterday at her imminent arrest.

“The Liberal Party reiterates that it condemns the political persecutio­n of brave administra­tion critic Sen Leila De Lima,” it said.

“This arrest is purely political vendetta and has no place in (a) justice system that upholds the rule of law. This is condemnabl­e. We reiterate that an arrest based on trumped-up charges is illegal.” — AFP

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