MANILA, Philippines — An impeachment complaint was filed Monday against Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte, who is facing a legal storm over a death threat she made against the president and her alleged role in extra-judicial killings of drug suspects, corruption and failure to stand up to Chinese aggression in the disputed South China Sea.
The impeachment bid filed by several prominent civil society activists in the House of Representatives accuses Duterte of violating the country's Constitution, betrayal of public trust and other ''high crimes,'' including the death threats she made against the president, his wife and the speaker of the House of Representatives.
Duterte did not immediately issue any response to the impeachment bid, which accused her of about two dozen alleged crimes.
''We're hoping that with this complaint, we can end the nightmare that our vice president has brought to the people,'' said Rep. Percival Cendana, who gave the required endorsement of the complaint.
The vice president's threats showed the ''extent of respondent's mental incapacity, her depravity and lack of mental fitness to continue holding the high office of vice president of the Philippines,'' said a copy of the complaint seen by The Associated Press. ''The same constitute not only betrayal of public trust but also a high crime which would warrant her immediate impeachment from office.''
Duterte, a 46-year-old lawyer, was also accused in the complaint of having unexplained wealth and of allowing a continuation of the extra-judicial killings of drug suspects begun by her father, a former mayor of southern Davao City, when she held that position in the past.
The vice president's legal troubles have unfolded with the backdrop of her increasingly bitter political feud with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and his allies. She said in online news conference on Nov. 23 that she has contracted an assassin to kill Marcos, his wife and Speaker Martin Romualdez if she were killed, a threat she warned was not a joke.
She later said she was not threatening him but was expressing concern for her own safety.