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Aaron Favila AP/Press Association Images
Duterte Harry

China offers Philippines weapons to continue its bloody war on drugs

“We’re exploring the possibilities of providing arms,” the Chinese ambassador to Manila said.

CHINA IS READY to give the Philippines weapons to help President Rodrigo Duterte wage his controversial war on drugs which has claimed over 5,000 lives, the Chinese ambassador to Manila has said.

Beijing has previously said it supports Duterte’s bloody crime war, which has been slammed by the United Nations and human rights watchdogs over alleged extrajudicial killings.

Beijing and Manila have experienced a rapprochement since Duterte’s election in May, despite their conflicting territorial claims to the South China Sea.

Ambassador Zhao Jianhua confirmed China was ready to supply the Philippines with weapons late yesterday.

“We’re exploring the possibilities of providing arms, light arms,” Zhao told reporters.

“Arms for fighting against terrorism, (for the) anti-drug campaign.”

The ambassador said talks were still in the initial stages, adding there was no agreement on price or the specific type of weapons, though they would most likely be rifles.

Duterte, 71, won elections in a landslide on a pledge to kill tens of thousands of criminals to fight narco-politics in the Philippines. Since he took office the crackdown has claimed over 5,000 lives.

The firebrand leader has also distanced the Philippines from longtime ally Washington, announcing his country’s “separation” from the United States on a visit to the Chinese capital in October.

The Chinese ambassador noted bilateral relations were “good” and were “going to be better” still, “because your president paid a very fruitful and historic state visit to China”.

Duterte has also hit out at US President Barack Obama and the State Department for criticism of his drug war.

However, according to Manila, incoming US leader Donald Trump has taken a different tact from Obama, apparently praising the crackdown when he spoke to Duterte by phone this month.

Last Sunday, Duterte said China was ready to supply the Philippines with arms under generous terms.

“It is a grant payable in 25 years so it is practically giving,” Duterte said in a speech.

He recently cancelled an order of about 27,000 assault rifles from the US after media reports that human rights concerns over his crime war would affect the delivery of the weapons.

- © AFP, 2016

Read: Alarm over proposed Philippine law to jail 9-year-olds

Read: Philippine President meets his ‘hero’ Putin to give out about US “hypocrisy and bullying”

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