MANILA, Nov 25 — Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr has vowed to fight back against what he called reckless and troubling threats against him, speaking out after his estranged vice president said he would be assassinated if she herself were killed.
In a strongly worded video message addressing the nation, he did not name Vice President Sara Duterte, his presidential running mate, but said "such criminal plans should not be overlooked."
In a dramatic twist in the fierce spat between Marcos and the powerful Duterte family, the daughter of firebrand former president Rodrigo Duterte said on Saturday (November 23) that she had instructed an assassin to kill Marcos, his wife, and the Lower House Speaker, in the event that she was killed.
She was responding to a question during an online press conference about whether she feared for her safety. Duterte did not cite any specific threat against her.
"The statements we heard in the previous days were troubling. There is the reckless use of profanities and threats to kill some of us.
"I will fight them," Marcos said today, adding that he would now allow such criminal attempts to pass.
"If planning the assassination of the president is that easy, how much more for ordinary citizens?" he questioned.
Duterte told the press that she had yet to hear the president's statement but would respond later.
[caption id="attachment_380996" align="aligncenter" width="1308"] Philippine Vice-President Sara Duterte speaks to the media at the House of Representatives, in Quezon City, the Philippines, on November 25, 2024. — Picture by REUTERS[/caption]
Dutertes under scrutiny
Her stunning remarks were the latest salvo in a bitter row that has intensified since the collapse of a formidable alliance between their two powerful families that saw Marcos, the son and namesake of the Philippines' late authoritarian leader, win the 2022 election by a huge margin.
Duterte quit her cabinet post in June and has battled against legislative scrutiny of her spending while in office, at times responding with open hostility to lawmakers and failing to show up for some proceedings.
Her threat to have Marcos killed stemmed from an order by lawmakers to transfer her chief-of-staff to a jail for allegedly impeding its probe over the vice president's alleged misuse of public funds.
According to a senior Justice Department official, the Vice President does not have immunity from prosecution and she will be summoned to appear at the National Bureau of Investigation over the threats she made.
"This is a serious threat, a very, very bad precedent for our country if we will not take legal action on these kinds of threat coming from a very high ranking official," Justice Undersecretary Jesse Hermogenes Andres told a press conference.
"The premeditated plot to assassinate the president as declared by the self-confessed mastermind will now face legal consequences," he said, adding that Duterte would obviously benefit if Marcos is harmed because she is next in line to take over the presidency.
Echoing the president's concerns, House Speaker Martin Romualdez said the Vice-President's statement was "reckless" and "dangerous."
"It sends a chilling message to our people, a message that violence can be contemplated by those in positions of power," Romualdez, a cousin of Marcos, said in a speech at a plenary session.
In a statement today, the National Security Council reiterated the safety of the president is a "non-partisan or non-political concern."
Marcos said it was vital for the interests of good governance that elected officials do not impede the work of legislators, adding "we will not have reached this drama if legitimate questions by Congress were answered".
Duterte's attack on Marcos also comes just weeks after the mercurial Rodrigo was the subject of marathon enquiries in the House and Senate into thousands of killings during the notorious "war on drugs" that defined his presidency from 2016 to 2022.
During those hearings, the Marcos administration signalled for the first time that it would cooperate with any international effort to arrest the former president, who is being investigated by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for possible crimes against humanity.
Rodrigo Duterte told the hearings he was solely responsible for the bloody crackdown and has urged the ICC to "hurry up" on its probe.
— Reuters
[caption id="attachment_380997" align="aligncenter" width="1311"] Philippine Vice-President Sara Duterte attends a legislative inquiry into her office's use of public funds at the House of Representatives, in Quezon City, the Philippines, on November 25, 2024. — Picture by REUTERS[/caption]