Badoy’s take: Quiboloy woes a ‘price to pay’ for fighting Reds | Inquirer News

Badoy’s take: Quiboloy woes a ‘price to pay’ for fighting Reds

/ 05:38 AM December 11, 2022

Lorraine Badoy. STORY: Badoy’s take: Quiboloy woes a ‘price to pay’ for fighting Reds

Lorraine Badoy. (INQUIRER FILE PHOTO)

MANILA, Philippines — The United States Department of the Treasury sanctions on televangelist Apollo Quiboloy, including a freeze order on his US-based assets, are all part of the sacrifice needed to end communism, according to Lorraine Badoy, a former spokesperson for the government’s anti-insurgency body.

“I’m not surprised by it at all. It’s the price that you pay. We’re all ready to pay that price just to end this 54-year scourge of the Communist Party (of the Philippines, or CPP) —the terrorists,” said Badoy, who served as a mouthpiece of the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-Elcac) during the Duterte administration.

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She is now an anchor at SMNI News Channel, a network owned by Quiboloy.

FEATURED STORIES

Badoy said news of the latest US sanctions on Quiboloy, founder of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ (KOJC) and self-proclaimed appointed “Son of God,” was no longer surprising because, according to her, he was a leading figure in the fight against the communist rebellion.

‘Systemic, pervasive rape’

Quiboloy is accused in the US of engaging in “serious human rights abuse, including a pattern of systemic and pervasive rape of girls as young as 11 years old, as well as other physical abuse.”

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“You know these terrorists, they’re all over … because the CPP-NPA-NDF (New People’s Army-National Democratic Front of the Philippines) is very much into propaganda. So of course you expect something like that,” Badoy told the Inquirer.

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When still serving under the NTF-Elcac, Badoy came under fire from militant groups and human rights watchdogs for Red-tagging activists or critics of the government, or linking them to the communist movement, often without basis.

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In October, the Supreme Court ordered her to explain why she should not be cited in contempt over her social media posts allegedly threatening Manila Regional Trial Court Judge Marlo Magdoza-Malagar. This was after the judge issued a decision rejecting the government’s move to declare the CPP and NPA as terrorist organizations.

In response, Badoy invoked freedom of expression, arguing that her statements were on a matter of public interest and constituted “fair comment” protected by law.

RELATED STORIES

Quiboloy network called out for red-tagging anew

US Treasury freezes Quiboloy assets

Quiboloy’s lawyers say US Treasury sanctions are ‘outrageous’

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