The Philippine Star

Rody: I cannot trust VP but I’m not firing her

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

The new anti-drug czar does not have the trust of President Duterte, but she will keep her post, with her access to confidenti­al matters limited to a “need to know basis.”

In a press conference at Malacañang late last night, President Duterte called Vice President Leni Robredo a “scatterbra­in” with “kneejerk” impulses whom he would not appoint to the Cabinet and entrust with sensitive informatio­n about the state.

He rained expletives on someone he described as a United Nations prosecutor who he said was invited by Robredo to Manila, and whose response was posted on Twitter.

Duterte vowed to slap the prosecutor in front of Robredo.

“Nakita ko ang tweet eh: I am packed and ready to arrest Duterte. P ***** i** mo Leni, sa harap mo sampalin ko yan,” the President said, shedding light on his withdrawal of his offer to give Robredo a Cabinet-rank position as anti-drug czar.

Despite the tirade, Duterte said Robredo would keep her post and he was merely “setting the parameters” of her role as co-chair of the InterAgenc­y Committee on Anti-Illegal Drugs or ICAD.

“You can give the directions, you can give the guidance,” he said in a message to Robredo. “(But) need to know ka lang… I don’t agree that because she is Vice President she already has security clearance.”

He said Robredo could make the war on drugs “transparen­t to her

liking, make it transparen­t for the people.”

“I never said I’m firing her,” he said, even as he accused Robredo of “grandstand­ing” and “treading a very dangerous ground.”

Last week Robredo had met with representa­tives of the UN Office of Drugs and Crime during which she reportedly discussed “best practices” in the global campaign against drugs.

“The way she behaved after I appointed her was not… inspiring. Natakot tuloy ako (I got scared),” Duterte said as he accused Robredo of “grandstand­ing.”

Duterte was apparently referring to a tweet on Nov. 11 by Phelim Kine, addressed to “Dear VP” Robredo: “my bags are packed and I’m ready to come to the Philippine­s to help advise how to end this murderous ‘drug war.’ Meanwhile here is my Recommenda­tion No. 1: Arrest Duterte and his henchmen for inciting & instigatin­g mass murder.”

Others tweeted that Kine is not a prosecutor of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court but a former deputy director for Asia of Human Rights Watch.

Duterte pointed out that sensitive informatio­n leaked by Robredo might be used by “fishermen” at the Senate – a reference to fishing expedition­s against his administra­tion.

He noted that one of the biggest drug trafficker­s is based in Bicol, and he worried about how Robredo, a native of the region, might use that kind of informatio­n.

“I cannot trust her not only because she is a member of the opposition. I do not trust her because I do not know her,” he admitted.

If he appointed Robredo to the Cabinet, giving her access to sensitive state informatio­n, he said “you will just place the republic in jeopardy.”

The state has deep penetratio­n agents in the drug war and he could not jeopardize them, Duterte said.

But he ordered the daily reports on anti-drug operations conducted by law enforcemen­t agencies to be posted on the website of PTV 4, where anyone can access informatio­n on persons arrested or “neutralize­d” or killed.

Earlier in the day, presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said Robredo’s “missteps” kept Duterte from giving her a Cabinet portfolio.

In an interview with reporters,

Panelo called the institutio­ns that met with Robredo “enemies of the state.”

“Let’s put it this way. Since she has talked with certain institutio­ns and people that are supposed to be enemies of the state, to the mind of the President that’s a dangerous sign. That means you may not be doing it purposely but it’s dangerous,” he added.

When asked which groups he considered enemies of the state, Panelo replied, “Any institutio­n that has already prejudged the war on drugs initiated by the President would be against the government.” He cited Kine as an example.

Panelo said Robredo also committed a misstep when she demanded “unlimited” access to documents, including those that contain classified informatio­n. He said Robredo, the leader of the opposition, “has a tendency to transmit whatever acquired informatio­n or knowledge she has.”

Panelo, neverthele­ss, claimed offering Robredo the anti-drug czar post was not a mistake.

The Palace spokesman, however, claimed that Robredo has not articulate­d new policies since accepting the post two weeks ago.

 ??  ?? Vice President Leni Robredo listens with Interior and Local Government Secretary Eduardo Año to a briefing by the PNP and DILG on strategies in fighting illegal drugs during her visit to the DILG office yesterday.
Vice President Leni Robredo listens with Interior and Local Government Secretary Eduardo Año to a briefing by the PNP and DILG on strategies in fighting illegal drugs during her visit to the DILG office yesterday.

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