The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

Duterte told to resign after controvers­ial confession he ‘touched’ maid

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VARIOUS WOMENS’ and moralist groups continue to criticize President Rodrigo Duterte a week after he admitted on public television broadcast that he touched his maid while she was asleep when he was a teenager.

Duterte’s confession, made during a speech, has sparked outrage with women’s rights political party, Gabriela, calling for his immediate resignatio­n. Women’s rights groups denounced the 73-year-old leader’s repulsive comments and accused him of attempted rape and encouragin­g sexual abuse. Duterte frequently sparks uproar with his comments on women, including rape jokes and boasting about adultery.

In his latest remarks, Duterte recounted a confession he had with a priest in high school, detailing how he had

entered the room of his maid while she was sleeping.

“I lifted the blanket... I tried to touch what was inside the panty,’ Duterte said. ‘I was touching. She woke up. So I left the room (and went to the comfort room).”

Duterte recounted telling the priest that he had then returned to the maid’s room and again tried to molest her.

Gabriela denounced Duterte’s comments saying he had confessed to attempted rape. “Rape does not happen only through penile insertion. If it is a finger or an object it is considered rape,” said Joms Salvador, secretary general of Gabriela.

Responding to the criticism, Duterte’s spokesman Salvador Panelo said that the president had made up and added and spliced the story. “He has made up a laughable anecdote to dramatise the fact of sexual abuse that was inflicted on him and his fellow students when they were in high school,” said Panelo.

Duterte made the remarks as he blasted the Catholic Church over allegation­s of sexually abusing children. The president, who brands the church the “most hypocritic­al institutio­n” in the mainly Catholic nation, said that he and his classmates at school were molested during confession.

It was his latest tirade against bishops and priests who have been critical of his drug war which has left more than 5,000 people dead, according to official figures.

Duterte and his aides often dismiss his controvers­ial statements about women as a ‘joke’ or insist they are taken out of context. He provoked fury in 2016 when during an election campaign speech he said he had wanted to rape a “beautiful” Australian missionary who had been murdered in a Philippine prison riot.

Women’s advocates said Duterte’s latest comments endangered domestic workers.

More than a million Filipinos work abroad as domestic workers, according to the labour ministry.

‘Flaunting abusive practices encourages the rape culture and in this case, sexual abuse of domestic workers,’ said Jean Enriquez, executive director of the Coalition Against Traffickin­g in Women-asia Pacific. (By AFP and JULIAN ROBINSON FOR MAILONLINE. With a report from the Mindanao Examiner.)

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