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Philippines President Duterte admits killing suspects
Story highlights
- Duterte told business leaders he used to drive around looking for "trouble"
- The controversial leader has been previously accused of killing people
(CNN)Controversial
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte has admitted killing suspected
criminals during his time as mayor of Davao City.
"In Davao, I used to do it personally. Just to show the guys that, if I can do it, why can't you?" Duterte said.
"And
(I'd) go around Davao with a motorcycle, with a big bike around and I
would just patrol the streets and looking for trouble also. I was really
looking for an encounter so I could kill."
He made the remarks at the Wallace Business Forum in Manila on Monday.
Since taking power in June, Duterte has waged a brutal "war on drugs." The crackdown has been linked to more than 5,900 deaths in less than six months.
The President's office has been contacted for comment.
'I have this migraine every day'
Speaking
at the same forum, Duterte told business leaders he had been using the
painkiller fentanyl to relieve severe pain after a "bad slip."
"I
have this migraine every day. I had a bad slip ... I hit my head on the
cement. I have a lot of issues with my spine," he said on Monday.
Duterte said he had been using more than the recommended dose of fentanyl until his doctor stopped him.
"I
was only given a fourth of (the whole patch), but no more, because of
course my doctor learned that I was using the whole patch because I felt
better," he said.
"When he knew it, he made me stop and he said, 'The first thing you would lose is your cognitive ability.'"
In addition to the ongoing pain, Duterte said he suffered from Buerger's disease, due to his history of smoking.
Duterte accused in senate hearing
Allegations
that Duterte had been personally involved in killings in Davao were
previously made at a senate inquiry set up to look into extrajudicial killings during the President's drug crackdown.
Self-professed hitman Edgar Matobato told the committee he saw Duterte unload two magazines of an Uzi submachine gun into a National Bureau of Investigation official.
"He must have finished 200 bullets," Matobato said in September.
The hitman claimed more than 1,000 people had been killed by death squads during Duterte's time as mayor.
The senate inquiry was scrapped and investigations stopped in October, after the committee's head and Duterte critic, Sen. Leila De Lima, was replaced.

Photos: Philippines drug crackdown
A
social worker gives counseling to those who have turned themselves in
for drug-related crimes in the Philippines on July 18, 2016.
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Photos: Philippines drug crackdown
A
Philippine police forensic investigator displays packets of drugs and a
hand gun found inside a shanty where members of a suspected drug
syndicate were killed after a shootout with police on July 3, 2016.
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Photos: Philippines drug crackdown
A suspected female member of a drug syndicate is presented by police in Manila on June 22, 2016.
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Photos: Philippines drug crackdown
A gun, bullets, marked money and sachets of crystal meth are laid on a table after a drug raid in Manila on June 20, 2016.
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Photos: Philippines drug crackdown
Police
officers stand in formation before the start of "Oplan Rody" on June 1,
2016, a law enforcement operation named after President Duterte, whose
nickname is Rody.
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Photos: Philippines drug crackdown
A woman cradles her husband, next to a placard which reads "I'm a pusher," who was shot dead in Manila on July 23, 2016.
















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