Newsweek

Duterte is Using Rumors of a Sex Tape to Smear A Critic

“Duterte wants to make an example of me so that nobody will speak out," says Leila de Lima.
Former Justice Secretary and now Senator Leila de Lima prepares to read a statement on August 18 at the Philippine Senate in suburban Pasay city south of Manila, Philippines. President Rodrigo Duterte, in a news conference, linked her to the illegal drug trade and called her an "immoral woman." de Lima responded, "President Duterte, who also criticized the United Nations for condemning the spate of killings of suspected drug criminals in the country, is "abusing and misusing his executive power."
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Leila de Lima is sitting at a square table sharing a meal with some of her political allies in a meeting room in a Manila hotel. Two young male aides stand guard outside the room; they ask that her hotel not be named. “This is my life now,” says de Lima, a human rights advocate and member of the Philippine Senate. “It’s become a nightmare, but I’m getting used to it.”

Since September 20, when her address and cellphone number were read out at a congressional hearing, de Lima, 57, has moved between the homes of friends and relatives. She has received death threats and is now too afraid to spend the night at her own house, where she lives alone. “I sneak home occasionally to see and users.

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