MANILA, Philippines — “I did what I had to do.”
This was what former President Rodrigo Duterte had to say when asked on Monday what he could tell the public about his administration’s brutal anti-drug campaign.
In an ambush interview at the Senate, Duterte said he had to implement the drug war “to protect the people” and his country.
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“I am here to make an accounting of what I did as President,” he told reporters.
Asked if he has any regrets about leading such a controversial anti-drug campaign, the former president simply said: “[The] drug war, it is for the Filipino to make a judgment.”
Duterte’s attendance before the Senate blue ribbon subcommittee marks his first appearance in a congressional inquiry into his administration’s bloody drug war dubbed as Oplan Tokhang.
The anti-drug campaign made the former president a central figure in the International Criminal Court’s investigation into crimes against humanity complaints filed by families of drug war victims.
The Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency listed 6,252 dead in anti-drug police operations from July 1, 2016, to May 31, 2022.
However, a 2017 year-end report attributed to the Office of the President listed more than 20,000 dead in the first 17 months of the Duterte administration.