Duterte threatens martial law in Philippines for his war on drugs

Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte has threatened to impose martial rule to prosecute his deadly war on drugs, three decades after the nation shed dictatorship with a famous “People Power” revolt.

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MANILA // Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte has threatened to impose martial rule to prosecute his deadly war on drugs, three decades after the nation shed dictatorship with a famous “People Power” revolt.

“If I wanted to, and it [the illegal drugs problem] will deteriorate into something really very virulent, I will declare martial law if I wanted to. No one will be able to stop me,” Mr Duterte said in a speech on Saturday night.

The 71-year-old former state prosecutor said the aim would be “to preserve the Filipino people and the youth of this land”.

Mr Duterte won elections in May last year on a pledge to wipe out illegal drugs, promising an unprecedented crackdown to stop the Philippines from becoming what he termed a “narco state”.

The crackdown has left at least 5,700 people dead in just over six months, raising concerns of a breakdown in the rule of law with security forces and vigilantes carrying out extrajudicial killings.

The Philippines’ longtime ally, the United States, has led international criticism of the killings, with outgoing President Barack Obama urging Mr Duterte to prosecute his war “the right way”.

Mr Duterte has reacted furiously to the criticism and vowed to continue his war until illegal drugs are eradicated. He has raised the prospect of imposing martial law previously.

However Saturday’s comments were the most direct threat.

Martial rule would allow the president to use the military to enforce civilian law and detain people at length without charging them.

The Philippines last endured martial law during the 20-year rule of dictator Ferdinand Marcos, who was accused of plundering billions of dollars from state coffers and overseeing widespread human rights abuses.

Marcos declared martial law in 1972, invoking the threats of crime and a communist insurgency, and lifted it in 1981.

His rule ended in 1986, when millions took to the streets in the largely bloodless military-backed “People Power” revolt.

A new constitution drawn up in 1987 in an effort to avoid another dictatorship specified a single six-year presidential term.

It also said the president could impose martial rule for just 60 days and only to stop an invasion or a rebellion.

Parliament can revoke the measure within 48 hours while the Supreme Court can review its legality.

But Mr Duterte, speaking to local businessmen in his southern hometown of Davao City, warned he could ignore the 60-day limit.

“The 60-day [limit] will be gone,” he said.

“And I’d tell you now, if I have to declare martial law, I will declare it — not about invasion, insurrection, not about danger. I will declare martial law to preserve my nation — period,” he said.

Also on Saturday, Mr Duterte said he has ordered the military to “blast” Abu Sayyaf who have been on a kidnap-for-ransom spree, even if hostages would also be killed.

“They say, ‘What about the hostage?’ Sorry, collateral damage. Then if they are blasted everyday, that [kidnappings] would stop, or, at least, places us in a very — and into a parity — So better not get yourselves kidnapped.”

Abu Sayyaf, a loose network of militants formed in the 1990s with seed money from Al Qaeda, preys on southern Philippine waters and has earned millions of dollars from kidnappings-for-ransom.

It beheaded two Canadian hostages last year after demands for millions of dollars were not met.

* Agence France-Presse