Pardon for US Marine should get Philippines virus vaccine access
President Rodrigo Duterte's pardon of a US marine
convicted of killing a transgender woman should help the Philippines gain
access to coronavirus vaccines being developed by American companies, his
spokesman said Thursday.
"I accept the reality that the president is
upholding the higher national interest," spokesman Harry Roque said,
although he insisted he was expressing a personal opinion, not that of Duterte.
Duterte sparked controversy earlier this week for
granting a surprise pardon to Lance Corporal Joseph Scott Pemberton, who was
halfway into a 10-year sentence for killing Jennifer Laude in October 2014.
Laude was found dead in a motel room in the northern
Philippines hours after she met the American at a bar in Olongapo city.
Roque said the pardon was linked to Duterte's desire
to win swift access to a vaccine against a virus that has infected about a
quarter of a million Filipinos, killing more than 4,000 of them.
"As we all know our president has emphasised
the need for a vaccine," Roque told a virtual news conference.
"The grant of a pardon to Pemberton is in line
with our president's desire that the Philippines should also benefit when
Americans do develop a vaccine," he said, stressing he was stating his
personal opinion.
Duterte's action has cleared all legal obstacles to
the soldier's release after a local court ordered him freed early on the
grounds of good behaviour.
Roque -- himself in quarantine after an aide tested
positive for the virus -- previously served as a lawyer for the victim's family
in the high-profile trial.
He rejected suggestions the Philippines was swapping
its sovereignty for a coronavirus vaccine.
"The higher interest is saving lives,"
Roque said.



