Senators: Duterte impeachable over claims of killings

Philippine President Duterte’s claims of killings when he was a mayor constitute “high crimes”, two senators say.

Rodrigo Duterte plans to revive the death penalty on heinous crimes, including drug-related offences [EPA]

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte risks impeachment after he admitted “personally” killing criminals when he was the mayor of Davao City, according to two Philippine senators.

The firebrand leader boasted to business leaders on Monday that as Davao City mayor he used to prowl the streets on a motorcycle looking for “an encounter to kill”, just to show to local law enforcers he was able to do so.

“I used to do it personally,” Duterte said. “If I can do it, why can’t you?”

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More than 2,000 people have been killed in police anti-drug operations since Duterte became president in July. Almost all were shot when they resisted arrest.

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Another 3,000 deaths are under investigation, with critics calling them vigilante killings.

Senator Leila de Lima, a staunch critic of Duterte, said the president’s admission could be a ground for impeachment.

“That is betrayal of public trust and that constitutes high crimes, because mass murders certainly fall into the category of high crimes. And high crimes is a ground for impeachment under the constitution,” de Lima told CNN on Thursday.

Senator Richard Gordon, who heads the Senate Justice Committee, also said Duterte opened himself to possible impeachment proceedings following his controversial comments.

“When he says that, he’s opening himself up, so what’s the legal way, then go ahead and impeach him,” he told reporters, adding he was not surprised by the statement.

Duterte’s ‘bravado’

Duterte’s allies in Congress dared the president’s opponents and critics to file an impeachment motion, saying that removing the leader through a political process is a numbers game.

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There are fewer than 50 opposition politicians in the 293-member lower house of Congress. A two-thirds vote is needed to impeach a president.

Peter Wallace, who organised the business forum where Duterte spoke, thought the president’s statement was his “usual bravado”.


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“He talked as he often does about drugs, and killings and criminality. And we had expected that he would but we were there not to listen to that,” said Wallace.

“We were there to talk to him or listen to him about business issues and I was pleased that … he moved on to those subjects,” he said.

Justice Minister Vitaliano Aguirre dismissed Duterte’s statement as an exaggeration.

“It’s like a hyperbole, that’s the president, he is used to exaggerate just to put his message across,” Aguirre was quoted in radio reports as saying on Thursday.

Even if that were true, Aguirre said it did not necessarily mean that he violated the law.

“It could be done with a justifiable cause and justified circumstances as a public officer in order to arrest but if they resisted. He must have been forced,” Aguirre said, referring to Duterte.

Source: News Agencies

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