More than 1,000 activists from different groups gathered at the "people power" revolt shrine along the main highway in the Manila metropolis where millions of Filipinos converged 31 years ago in a largely peaceful uprising to oust Marcos.
The army-backed revolt, which became a harbinger of peaceful change in authoritarian regimes worldwide, ended a presidency marked by massive corruption, abuse of power and human rights violations.
Reacting to criticism that the government rites reflected Duterte's cordial attitude toward the Marcoses, presidential spokesman Ernesto Abella said the late dictator "is not that iconic in the mind of the president."
"I think it is too much to say that he is the new Macoy," Abella said, using a shortened reference to Marcos.
The protesters condemned the thousands of killings of mostly poor drug suspects in a brutal crackdown Duterte ordered shortly after he took office in June and other policy changes, including his call for the reimposition of the death penalty, preferably by public hanging.
"The pile of bodies in the Duterte government's war on drugs, arrests and killings of political activists, renewed push for death penalty, and militarization of communities affecting women and children is nothing but a U-turn to full-blown fascism," left-wing Rep Emmi De Jesus said.
"We will stand our ground against efforts to revert to dictatorship," she said.
Another group, called Block Marcos, warned Duterte may already be starting to curtail civil liberties without formally declaring martial law.
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