"They said there are many rape cases in Davao,” Duterte said. “As long as there are many beautiful women, there will be more rape cases."

The president continued by asking rhetorically, "Who agrees to do it on the first request anyway? Will the woman allow it? No. 'Don’t, no, ahhh.' Nobody agrees to do it on the first try," according to Rappler, a Phillipines-based news website. "Nobody agrees to do it on the first try. That is rape."

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Women's groups condemned the remark, and his spokesman, Harry Roque, was quoted in the New York Times as saying, "I don't think we should give too much weight on what the president says by way of a joke."

"They're not okay with rape jokes," Roque said, "but let's just say that perhaps the standard of what is offensive and what it not offensive is more liberal in the south."

It's hard to even keep track of how many similar comments Duterte has made since he took office in 2016. Last year, he reportedly joked that soldiers working in areas where martial law had been declared could rape three women without facing punishment. "If you had raped three, I will admit it, that's on me," he said, according to Al Jazeera.

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On the campaign trail before he was elected, he brought up the case of an Australian missionary, Jacqueline Hamill, who inmates at a jail in Davao gang-raped and killed in a prison riot in 1989. At the time, he was serving as Davao's mayor.

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"I was angry because she was raped, that's one thing," Duterte said. "But she was so beautiful, the mayor should have been first. What a waste."

When Australian ambassador to Manila Amanda Gorely responded on Twitter that "rape and murder should never be joked about or trivialised," Duterte barked back. "This is politics," he wrote. "Stay out. Stay out Australian government. Stay out."

In yet another comment about sexual assault in 2017, he reportedly said that he doesn't like it when kids are raped but, "you can mess with, maybe Miss Universe," he said. "Maybe I will even congratulate you for having the balls to rape somebody when you know you are going to die."

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Other gaffes of Duterte's include calling the U.S. ambassador to Manila a "gay son of a whore," and calling God "stupid," in a country where the majority of people are Catholic.

And when his daughter said she was sexually assaulted, he called her a "drama queen," the New York Times reported.