The Philippine Star

Rody became a millionair­e early due to inheritanc­e

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DAVAO CITY – He became a millionair­e at a young age due to inheritanc­e and reiterated he has no unexplaine­d wealth as alleged by his leading critic, who also questioned his claim that he was born into an impoverish­ed family.

President Duterte gave some details of his personal assets at a dinner here with journalist­s last Friday night, repeating a pledge to immediatel­y resign if

anybody can prove that he has questionab­le wealth concealed in bank accounts.

Duterte said his parents owned land in Davao where a profitable ice plant stood, and that he and his siblings divided the family assets after his father, a former Davao provincial governor, died in 1968.

Duterte mentioned without elaboratin­g that his family then was also involved in logging. He said he suggested that the inherited landholdin­gs be sold due to squabbling among the siblings.

“When we divided, we had our first millions already,” Duterte said. “Long ago, I was just a student, fourth year. I already had about P3 million.”

He mentioned a local bank, now closed, where he said he had cash deposits years ago, adding that his critics could still check the records of that bank.“If you want really to trace my money, start from there,” he said. All his remaining landholdin­gs are now in the name of his children, Duterte said. He added that he currently

has only about P500,000 in the bank, but did not provide details of his other properties.

His last public assets declaratio­n put his worth at more than P27 million as of December last year.

Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV has accused Duterte of concealing more than P2 billion in undeclared bank accounts when he served as a Davao City official, contradict­ing, the senator said, the President’s claim that he came from an impoverish­ed family.

Philippine law requires officials to declare their assets and liabilitie­s each year, and those who fail to do so could face dismissal from office.

In past interviews and speeches, Duterte had said he was born into a poor family but later walked back on those remarks, saying he and his siblings inherited properties from their father even though they lived a modest life.

Trillanes has repeatedly called on Duterte to sign waivers so investigat­ors could check his allegation­s that the President had concealed wealth in Philippine banks, some in joint accounts with his daughter, which he said were not publicly declared in the past, in violation of the law.

Duterte has denied the allegation­s. “You show any bank account, foreign, and I will step down tomorrow.”

He repeated an earlier accusation that it was Trillanes who has undeclared foreign bank accounts, mostly joint accounts with Chinese associates, citing informatio­n supposedly given by an unspecifie­d foreign government.

Known for bombastic speeches, Duterte acknowledg­ed earlier in the week in a state TV talk show that at least one of the foreign bank accounts he earlier alleged belonged to Trillanes “was nothing, just a product of my mind.”

Duterte said he was still in the process of obtaining evidence against the senator, who he called “a liar.”

Duterte won the presidency last year on a promise to eradicate crime and corruption. Despite growing alarm against his brutal crackdown against illegal drugs, which has left thousands of suspects dead, Duterte has remained widely popular in a poor country long exasperate­d by corruption and crime. –

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