Philippine Senator Leila de Lima, an outspoken critic of President Rodrigo Duterte, launched a scathing attack on the Philippine president, calling him a "self-confessed serial killer." Speaking at the Annual Conference on Cultural Diplomacy 2016 in Berlin, Germany on Sunday, she said: "In May of this year, 16 million Filipinos elected a self-confessed serial killer as President." "In the last five months, he has proven true his blood-soaked promise, at least to the extent that, by the Philippine National Police's own statistics, we have now recorded a total of more than 6,095 deaths in connection with the Duterte administration's so-called "War on Drugs" — which is turning out to be more of a "war on the poor", while big-time drug lords have thus far been mostly allowed to evade justice," De Lima added. Back at home, Philippine Catholic leaders and rights groups on Monday condemned as "barbaric" President Rodrigo Duterte's plan to restore the death penalty and execute "five or six" criminals daily. Duterte, 71, has made reviving the death penalty in the mainly Catholic nation his top legislative priority as part of a brutal war on crime. "There was death penalty before but nothing happened. Return that to me and I would do it every day: five or six (criminals). That's for real," Duterte said on Saturday. An official at the influential Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines said the Church "totally opposed" Duterte's plan. "The Philippines will be viewed as very barbaric," Father Jerome Secillano, executive secretary at its public affairs office, said. "It's going to make the Philippines the capital of death penalty in the world." The Philippines abolished the death penalty in 2006 following fierce opposition to the penalty from the Catholic Church, the religion of 80 percent of Filipinos. Before assuming office in June, Duterte vowed to introduce executions by hanging, saying he did not want to waste bullets and believed snapping the spinal cord was more humane than a firing squad. Duterte has said he viewed the death penalty not as a means to deter crime but for retribution. Duterte's allies in the House of Representatives quickly pushed for the bill and said they would vote on it by January. The United Nations' human rights chief, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, said in a letter to the Philippine congress this month that reviving the death penalty would violate the country's international obligations. But on Saturday Duterte insisted executions were necessary to fight the drug scourge which he said was "destroying" the nation. While his aides dismiss his incendiary statements as hyperbole, rights advocates said Duterte's remarks were alarming. "Setting a quota for executions is just too much. One death is too much because we are talking about lives," Amnesty International Philippines vice chairman Romeo Cabarde said. Catholic leaders and rights defenders have instead urged the government to reform a slow and corrupt justice system which they said was likely to send innocent people to death row. — Agencies