"You sons of whores, aren't you ashamed? You ask so many favours,
even from me," Duterte said in an interview broadcast by TV station GMA.
Philippine President-elect Rodrigo Duterte said he will defy the Roman Catholic Church and seek to impose a three-child policy, putting him on a new collision course with the bishops a day after he called them "sons of whores".
The
southern mayor has yet to be declared the May 9 poll winner, but an
unofficial vote count by an election commission-accredited watchdog
showed him ahead over his four rivals, three of whom conceded defeat.
Duterte assumes office on June 30.
Duterte's often
outrageous comments have won him huge support and his tirades about
killing criminals and a joke about a murdered rape victim do not appear
to have dented his popularity in the largely Catholic country.
"I only want three children for every family," Duterte said on Sunday in Davao City. "I'm
a Christian, but I'm a realist so we have to do something with our
overpopulation. I will defy the opinion or the belief of the Church."
About
80 percent of the Philippines' 100 million population are Catholics,
the largest concentration of any Asian country, who oppose abortion and
contraception.
On Saturday, he criticised the
Church as the "most hypocritical institution", meddling in government
policies and said some bishops were enriching themselves at the expense
of the poor.
"You sons of whores, aren't you ashamed? You ask so many favours, even from me," Duterte said in an interview broadcast by TV station GMA.
Monsignor
Oliver Mendoza, spokesman for the Archdiocese of Lingayen, whose head
is the president of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines,
said the Church respected Duterte's opinion but that it would continue
to speak against government policies that are contrary to Church
teaching.
"Because if we fail to do that, if
we close our eyes, if we close our lips, we close our ears, what will be
the role of the Church?" he said.
Political
analysts said they were not surprised at Duterte's statements because
some bishops spoke out against him during the election campaign.
"Like most liberal, secular politicians, Duterte is a deist," said Joselito Zulueta of the University of Santo Tomas. "This
in itself is a self-serving position conceived out of human conceit. He
will do as he pleases except when he's stopped by public criticism."
He
said Duterte's government was expected to clash more with the Catholic
Church not only on population issues, but on the restoration of death
penalty, legalisation of divorce and planned distribution of
contraceptives.
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