Duterte says senator probing killings received drug money

Duterte says senator probing killings received drug money
TURNING THE TABLE: Sen. Leila De Lima, right, gestures as she talks to a fellow senator, Antonio Trillanes IV, at the Senate probe on the rising number of extrajudicial killings related to President Rodrigo Duterte’s “War on Drugs,” on Tuesday, in Manila. (AP)
Updated 26 August 2016
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Duterte says senator probing killings received drug money

Duterte says senator probing killings received drug money

MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Thursday accused a senator heading an inquiry into extra-judicial drug killings of taking bribes from jailed drug lords, which she immediately denied.
The senator, Leila de Lima, who has criticized the surge of killings and called for the Senate investigation, appealed to Duterte in a news conference to “stop this madness.”
More than 1,900 people have been killed in Duterte’s war on drugs since he came to power seven weeks ago, according to police figures. Police say the toll of about 36 people a day is a result of drug dealers resisting arrest or gang feuds.
Duterte, who won a May election on a promise to wipe out drugs and dealers, last month named about 160 officials, judges, police and soldiers who he said were protecting drug traffickers or selling drugs in their communities.
On Thursday, he turned his anger on De Lima.
“De Lima, you are finished,” Duterte told a news conference in Davao City in the south of the country where he used to be mayor and built his reputation as a ruthless crime fighter.
Duterte handed the media a diagram purportedly showing links between officials and politicians and big drug dealers locked up in the country’s main prison.
At the top of the list was de Lima.
“De Lima is undergoing a nightmare now,” Duterte said.
De Lima later held her own news conference and denied the president’s accusations as “nonsense and baseless.” She said the diagram showing her atop a web of graft and drugs was “garbage.”
She said was the only one speaking out against Duterte’s war on drugs and she would not be threatened.
“Stop this madness,” she pleaded to the president.
“It’s as if this war against drugs has turned into a war versus de Lima ... It’s like he’s really bent on destroying me at all costs. I hope he stops it.”
This month, Duterte said de Lima was having an affair with her driver. She declined to comment on the issue.
Also on the president’s diagram was a congressman, who is also a retired police general and former provincial governor, a former deputy justice minister and his brother, a former prison official, and a civilian, who was de Lima’s driver.
The United States, a close ally of the Philippines, said this week it was “deeply concerned” about the reports of extra-judicial drug killings and it urged Duterte’s government to ensure that law-enforcement efforts “comply with its human rights obligation.”
The crackdown and some strongly worded criticism Duterte has made of the United States since coming to power present a dilemma for Washington.