"In Davao I used to do it personally. Just to show to
the guys [police] that if I can do it why can't you," he
said.
"And I'd go around in Davao with a motorcycle, with a
big bike around, and I would just patrol the streets,
looking for trouble also. I was really looking for a
confrontation so I could kill."
In 2015, he admitted killing at least three men
suspected of kidnapping and rape in Davao.
The comments have been condemned by human rights
group Amnesty International, which has called on him to
put an immediate end to the killings.
"The climate of impunity in the Philippines has
intensified even further since President Duterte began
his brutal crackdown on suspected drug users and dealers
in July, with a wave of unlawful killings claiming more
than 5,000 lives across the country," said Rafendi
Djamin, the group's director for South East Asia and the
Pacific.
"By boasting about the blood on his own hands,
President Duterte will further embolden police and
vigilantes to blatantly violate laws and carry out more
extrajudicial executions without fear of being held to
account."
But just hours before Mr Duterte's latest remarks, he
insisted "I am not a killer", in a speech for The
Outstanding Filipino Awards 2016. He has also previously
both acknowledged and denied being involved with death
squads.
In September a Senate inquiry heard testimony from a
self-confessed former death squad member that Mr Duterte
had, while serving as Davao mayor, shot dead a justice
department agent with an Uzi submachine gun.
Nearly 6,000 people are said to have been killed by
police,
vigilantes and mercenaries since Mr Duterte launched
his drug war after being elected in May. He has
expressed few regrets about the policy,
once saying: "Hitler massacred three million Jews...
There's three million drug addicts. I'd be happy to
slaughter them."
Mr Duterte has repeatedly said he does not care about
human rights and has suggested that lawyers defending
drug suspects might also be targeted in his campaign,
says the BBC's Jonathan Head.
Some human rights lawyers believe the outspoken
president's open support for a shoot-to-kill policy by
the police could make him vulnerable to prosecution for
crimes against humanity at the international court.
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