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Manny Pacquiao. Photo: AFP

Manny Pacquiao refuses to back down despite being dumped by Nike after saying ‘gays are worse than animals’

A Nike statement released on Wednesday said the company no longer wanted anything to do with Pacquiao because of his comments.

Philippine boxing great Manny Pacquiao refused to back down on Friday over gay slurs that have tarnished his reputation and cost him millions in sponsorship deals, insisting God is on his side.

The eight-division world champion smiled and joked through a short training session in his hometown of General Santos just after dawn, then told reporters he had no intention of bowing to his critics.

“What I am saying is right. I mean I am just stating the truth, what the Bible says,” Pacquiao said.

READ MORE: Boxer Manny Pacquiao's incredible rags to riches story

Pacquiao, who converted from Catholicism to an evangelical Protestant faith late in his boxing career, created a global controversy this week when he described homosexuals as worse than animals.

“It’s common sense. Do you see animals mating with the same sex? Animals are better because they can distinguish male from female,” Pacquiao told Filipino television station TV5. “If men mate with men and women mate with women, they are worse than animals.”

I mean I am just telling what the Bible says. We believe God and then we should honour the word of God
Manny Pacquiao

Pacquiao issued an apology on social media after the controversy broke. But Nike, his major global sponsor, immediately cancelled its endorsement deal with him, describing his comments as “abhorrent”.

Pacquiao, who intends to retire after his April fight against American Timothy Bradley to pursue a career in politics, said on Friday his apology was qualified.

READ MORE: Why Pacquiao was just being true to himself - as an unrepentant homophobe

“What I did wrong was just comparing the people to animals, but you know what I am telling is the truth,” he said. “I mean I am just telling what the Bible says. We believe God and then we should honour the word of God.”

Pacquiao said the controversy had not impacted his training or dampened his morale.

“I’m happy. I’m always happy because God is with me,” he said.

READ MORE: Manny Pacquiao dropped by sports giant Nike in wake of anti-gay statements

One of Pacquiao’s media handlers told reporters at the training session on Friday that they were not allowed to ask him any questions about the controversy.

However, Pacquiao appeared eager to show he remained firm in his religious convictions, and happily accepted questions on the controversy.

A Nike statement released on Wednesday said the company no longer wanted anything to do with Pacquiao because of his comments.

“Nike strongly opposes discrimination of any kind and has a long history of supporting and standing up for the rights of the LGBT community... we no longer have a relationship with Manny Pacquiao,” the statement said.

Pacquiao continued to wear his Nike apparel at Friday’s training session.

We should let people live their lives the way they want to live their lives. To each his own
Floyd Mayweather

Many prominent figures in the United States, where same-sex marriage is enshrined in law, also expressed revulsion this week at Pacquiao’s comments.

Jason Collins, the first openly gay athlete in the NBA, dismissed Pacquiao as “bigoted”.

READ MORE: Manny Pacquiao apologises for gays ‘worse than animals’ comment

“I lost all respect for you,” Collins wrote on Twitter. “Bigoted people like you (& yes you are one) should never hold an office in politics.”

Pacquiao’s long-time rival, Floyd Mayweather – who outclassed the Filipino in their money-spinning mega-fight last year – also took aim at the remarks.

“We should let people live their lives the way they want to live their lives. To each his own,” Mayweather was quoted by TMZ Sports as saying.

While homosexuality is not criminalised in the Philippines, gay marriage is outlawed due to strong opposition from the Catholic Church.

Eighty per cent of the Philippines’ 100 million people are Catholics. But the controversy has dominated the local media, and gay rights campaigners have expressed outrage.

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