Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte told a group of Indian and Filipino business leaders in New Delhi that he would like to attract visitors to his country by offering “42 virgins”.
In a speech on Friday aimed at luring investors to the Philippines, Duterte also said Indian businessmen should “avoid Mindanao” because “there’s still martial law there”, referring to the southern Philippine island, where armed Muslim rebels and fighters continue to battle government forces.
Duterte was on a three-day trip to the Indian capital to attend a regional summit between India and leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and participate in the country’s Republic Day celebration.
In a statement on Saturday, a women’s activist group called Duterte an “international embarassment”, Rappler reported.
“We deserve a president who can represent Filipinos: men, women and LGBT alike abroad. We deserve a president who has a regard for women’s rights and dignity,” the Akbayan Women’s rights group said. “He has no respect for Filipino women.”
While talking about the armed conflict in Mindanao, Duterte criticised the “totally bankrupt” ideology of the armed Muslim fighters, who laid siege to the southern city of Marawi for five months in 2017, “for nothing”.
“The come-on is that if you die a martyr, you go to heaven with 42 virgins waiting for you,” Duterte said in a rambling speech.
“Well, if I could just make it a come-on also for those who’d like to go to my country,” he said to faint laughter from the audience.
Declaring that he is “half-Muslim”, he said armed Muslim fighters in Mindanao “do not have the monopoly of discourse in this field”.
“And I said, one of the most is promising virgins when you go to heaven. I’d like to have the virgins here, not in heaven. God may not allow it,” he said.
In his speech, Duterte also assured investors that he is fighting corruption and drug abuse in the country.
The president’s office later announced that Duterte secured $1.25bn in “investment pledges” from Indian businessmen.
Aljazeera