Business World

Duterte failed in drug war, says ex-ally and presidenti­al candidate

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A FORMER ally of President Rodrigo R. Duterte who is running for president on Monday said the tough-talking leader had failed in his war against illegal drugs.

“What a waste,” Senator Panfilo M. Lacson told Bombo Radyo. “If he had only capitalize­d on his overwhelmi­ng mandate, his popularity and good intentions, we could have succeeded,” he said in Filipino.

Mr. Lacson said the government could have solved the country’s illegal drug problem with proper enforcemen­t. “He could have resolved it within the rule of law and without the Philippine National Police having to resort to extrajudic­ial means.”

Mr. Duterte only focused on law enforcemen­t, Mr. Lacson, a former police general, said. “It should have been a holistic, comprehens­ive approach.”

He added that the President could have avoided a probe by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity had he done it properly.

Mr. Lacson also faulted Mr. Duterte’s allegedly unequal treatment when it came to his fight against corruption.

“Along the way, in the implementa­tion, we saw that he doesn’t just have one standard,” he said, adding that presidenti­al friends often got away with it.

Mr. Duterte last year barred Cabinet officials from attending a Senate investigat­ion of alleged anomalies at the Health department, saying it was a waste of time.

Mr. Lacson said the president’s friendship with Chinese President Xi Jinping had not helped resolve the sea dispute between the two nations. Thousands of Filipino fishermen lost their livelihood and billions of pesos worth of aquatic resources were destroyed as a result, he added.

The lawmaker said the government had let Chinese vessels bully Filipino fishermen in the South China Sea and failed to back a United Nations-backed arbitral ruling until the last year of Mr. Duterte’s six-year term. That ruling invalidate­d China’s claim to more than 80% of the disputed sea.

Filipinos will choose Mr. Duterte’s replacemen­t in elections on May 9.

Meanwhile Mr. Lacson separately told DZBB Radio he would not set a deadline for his goals as president, including the fight against illegal narcotics.

“We don’t need to impose a deadline,” he said. “We just have to do and execute them well.

Even if we don’t have a deadline, success will follow.” — Alyssa

Nicole O. Tan

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