An opposition lawmaker on Sunday called on President Rodrigo Duterte and his team to “put their acts together” and avoid making “provocative and outlandish” statements, after drawing international backlash for citing Adolf Hitler in the government’s bloody war on drugs.
Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman said the “essence and context” of Duterte’s remark that drew parallels with Hitler’s killing of Jews in the Holocaust and his antidrug drive was “vivid and undeniable,” and thus cannot claim to be misinterpreted.
“Duterte’s apologists cannot again incant that the President was ‘quoted out of context.’ The defenders of Duterte maliciously demeaned media, both local and foreign, by accusing them of misreading the President’s clear statement,” Lagman said in a statement.
“There is a principle in law that when the language of the statute is clear, there is no need to construe. In the same manner, when the utterance is unmistakable, there is no justification to interpret or mitigate,” he added.
Upon arriving from an official visit to Vietnam, Duterte on Friday said he would be “happy to slaughter” three million drug addicts in the Philippines by himself in the same way that Hitler had murdered millions of Jews before and during the Second World War.
““If Germany had Hitler, the Philippines would have …,” Duterte told reporters in Davao City, before pausing and pointing to himself.
The President’s remarks drew a barrage of criticisms from the United Nations, German and Israeli governments, the Pentagon, and international rights groups.
READ: Duterte ‘Hitler’ talk reaps international censure
Lagman said it was imperative for Duterte and his team to have “prior consultations and discussions” before making statements.
“The President must avoid outlandish and provocative statements with detrimental consequences. The mouth must be the oracle of discreet and studied statements, not ill-conceived and outrageous utterances,” Lagman added. JE