Protests have broken out in Manila over Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's plans to honour the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos with a state burial.

Key points: Duterte has defended Marcos saying the two families have history

Duterte has defended Marcos saying the two families have history Protesters included Marcos-era victims of torture and imprisonment

Protesters included Marcos-era victims of torture and imprisonment Marcos preserved body has been on display since he died in exile in 1989

About 2,000 people gathered in heavy rain to denounce Mr Duterte's plans to move Marcos' remains from his northern hometown to the National Heroes' Cemetery in the capital, Manila, next month.

"We would be the laughing stock of the entire planet," Senator Risa Hontiveros, one of four members of Parliament to attend the Manila rally, said.

Ms Hontiveros added that Marcos was an "unrepentant enemy of our heroes".

Marcos's family have kept his preserved body on display after he died in exile in 1989 following a popular revolt three years earlier, demanding that it be buried with full honours in the Heroes' Cemetery.

Marcos was elected president in 1965 and declared martial law in 1972, allowing him to rule as a dictator while he, his family and allies enriched themselves through massive corruption and his troops brutally stamped out dissent.

But Mr Duterte, who has styled himself as an anti-corruption crusader, defended Marcos, noting that his father had served in the Marcos cabinet and he himself had even voted for Marcos before.

The body of Ferdinand Marcos has been stored in a crypt at the family home since 1993. ( AFP: Ted Aljibe )

'I was jailed when I was young': Marcos-era victims join protests

Mr Duterte has previously said that he won the May 9 elections partly with the support of the Marcos family who remain influential in their bailiwick in the northern Philippines.

A small protest was also staged by human rights victims outside Mr Duterte's southern hometown of Davao city, where candles and flowers were placed outside the city hall, television reports said.

The protests on Sunday were joined by Marcos-era victims of torture and imprisonment as well as relatives of victims of extrajudicial killings, which historians say claimed thousands of lives.

Protesters shed tears during the three-hour protest and organisers launched a signature campaign to try to reverse Mr Duterte's decision.

"I was jailed when I was young. It's so hard to imagine that he will be buried in the Heroes' Cemetery," former Marcos prisoner Danny Tang told reporters.

University of the Philippines Professor Ricardo Jose alleged that in order to win war medals for bravery, Marcos faked his service record in the anti-Japanese resistance when Japan occupied the country in World War II.

"There are World War II heroes buried there who sacrificed their lives .... but here's one guy who distorted things in his favour," Mr Jose told reporters at the rally.

Duterte spokesman Martin Andanar told reporters on Sunday that while the leader allowed protests against the burial plan, he "remains firm" it will be carried out.

AFP