MANILA —
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte apologized "profoundly and
deeply" to the Jewish community on Sunday, and said his references to the
Holocaust while discussing his war on drugs was to hit back at critics who had
likened him to Adolf Hitler.
Duterte said he recognized the
comments made in the early hours of Friday had caused outrage among Jewish
communities around the world, but he insisted his mention of the Nazi leader
was to show how opponents had sought to portray him.
"I would like to make it now,
here and now, that there was never an intention on my part to derogate the
memory of the six million Jews murdered," he said in a speech at a
festival carried live on television.
"The
reference to me was, I was supposedly Hitler, who killed many people."
He added: "I apologize
profoundly and deeply to the Jewish community ... it was never my intention,
but the problem was I was criticized, using Hitler comparing to me."
More than 3,100 people have been
killed since Duterte took office three months ago and launched a promised drugs
war that was the bedrock of his campaign for elections, which he won by a large
margin.
Most of
those killed so far have been drug users and pushers, with some deaths during
shootouts in police operations and others the work of vigilantes, police say.
Duterte, 71, has been nicknamed
"the Punisher" for his tough stance on crime. He said on Friday he
had been portrayed by critics as being "a cousin of Hitler" and said
he would "be happy to slaughter" three million Filipino drug users
and peddlers.
The
comments caused outrage, and follow other provocative public outbursts in the
past few months.
Duterte's narcotics crackdown has
broad support among Filipinos fed up with drugs and crime, and he has lashed
out at those who have challenged it, including U.S. President Barack Obama and
U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon.
He had vented his frustration again
on Sunday at human rights groups and what he called "stupid" lawyers
of the European Union.
Duterte's spokesman on Saturday said
Duterte rejected the Hitler label and his remarks the previous day were an
"oblique deflection" of him being portrayed as a mass murderer.
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