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Duterte calls the European Union "hypocrite"

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Duterte turns ire on EU, calls them hypocrites and uses ‘F’ word
By: Leila B. Salaverria
Philippine Daily Inquirer
08:01 PM September 20th, 2016



MANILA — President Duterte let loose a fresh string of tirades against the European Union, on Tuesday, after it called for a halt to extrajudicial killings of drug suspects in the Philippines.

“I read the condemnation of the EU against me. I will tell them, ‘**** you.’ You’re doing it in atonement for your sins,” Mr. Duterte said in a speech before local government officials in Davao City.

Duterte said members of the European Union have become strict about the behavior of other nations due to their “guilt feelings” over the atrocities they had committed in the past.

He also called them hypocrites, as he added that a check of encyclopedias would show what European countries have done, he said. For instance, France and Great Britain had killed Arabs, he said.

“And then EU now has the gall to condemn me. I repeat it, ‘**** you,’” he said.

Mr. Duterte also asked who he was supposed to have killed in the Philippines.

Assuming accusations against him were true, and there were over 1,000 killed in the country, he asked who were the people killed.

“Who are they? Criminals? You call it genocide? How many did they kill?” he asked. SFM

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http://globalnation.inquirer.net/14...e-on-eu-calls-them-hypocrites-and-uses-f-word
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The reason why Duterte lashes back at the EU...



EU joins call for halt to killings in drug war
By: Amando Doronila
01:36 AM September 19th, 2016


CANBERRA—The European Union has joined the global call on the Philippine government to “put an end to the current wave of extrajudicial executions and killings” of drug suspects.

Alarmed at the rising death toll in President Duterte’s brutal crackdown on drug syndicates, the EU Parliament directed its delegation in the Philippines and the embassies of 28 European countries in Manila to monitor rights abuses following his declaration on Sept. 3 of a “state of national emergency on account of lawlessness.”

Mr. Duterte placed the entire country under a state of national emergency after a bomb exploded at a night market in his hometown, Davao City, on Sept 2, killing 15 people and injuring 69 others.

In an extraordinary intervention, the EU lawmakers passed a five-page resolution expressing concern over the appalling number of drug suspects killed by police and vigilantes since Mr. Duterte launched a crackdown on illegal drugs upon taking office on June 30. More than 3,000 people have been killed in just over two months. Mr. Duterte has pledged to eradicate the drugs scourge in three to six months of his presidency.

The EU members represent the largest bloc of Western democracies, including Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg, Czech Republic, Sweden, Portugal and Finland.

The EU intervention aligned with a number of states (including the United States), the United Nations and international human rights watchdog organizations that have called on the Philippines to end the extrajudicial killings.

This growing concerted global demand to end the extrajudicial executions has put the Philippine government at risk of inviting international sanctions, including either diplomatic or economic, and isolation if it continued to defy or ignore the calls.

Without directly blaming the government, the EU lawmakers said they believed Mr. Duterte’s incendiary public statements had encouraged mass murders involving drug traffickers and users.

“President Duterte repeatedly urged law enforcement agencies and the public to kill suspected drug traffickers who did not surrender as well as drug users,” the EU resolution said.

“President Duterte publicly stated he would not pursue law enforcement officers and citizens who killed drug dealers and who resisted arrest,” it added.


No to death penalty

According to wire services reports, the EU Parliament adopted the resolution dealing with extrajudicial killings in the Philippines based on the Partnership Cooperation Agreement signed by the European Union and the Philippines in 2014, to advance engagement on political, trade, security, environment and human rights issues.

The agreement commits the Philippines to uphold the rule of law, social democracy, as well as international human rights conventions.

The EU Parliament also emphasized that ending the extrajudicial killings of drug suspects was vital to the Philippines’ holding the chairmanship of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) in 2017.

The lawmakers pointed out that “President Duterte has announced that during the Philippines’ chairmanship, we (the government) will highlight Asean as a model of regionalism and global player, with the interest of the people at its core.”

They also called on the Philippine Congress “to abstain from reintroducing the death penalty (which Mr. Duterte has endorsed) and from lowering the minimum age of criminal liability.”

The EU Parliament said that based on “all empirical evidence, the death penalty does not reduce the drug delinquency and would destroy a great achievement of the Philippine justice system.”

It directed its delegation in the Philippines to provide wide assistance to the Philippine government to implement measures in line with its commitment to international human rights obligations.


Lack of understanding

On another front, Mr. Duterte came under fire from the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights for speaking against and opposing human rights institutions and investigations.

Speaking at the 33rd session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday, High Commissioner Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said, “The President of the Philippines’ statements of scorn for international human rights display a striking lack of understanding of our human rights institutions and principles which keep societies safe.”

Al Hussein pointed out that “fair and impartial rule of law is the foundation of public confidence and security” and “empowering police forces to shoot to kill any individual whom they claim to suspect of drug crimes, with or without evidence, undermines justice.”

He emphasized, “The people of the Philippines have a right to judicial institutions that are impartial, and operate under due process guarantees; and they have a right to a police that serves justice. I strongly recommend the Philippines to extend an invitation to the special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions.”

Al Hussein said that governments had accused human rights institutions of interfering in the affairs of sovereign nations.

“Are human rights exclusively a national issue? Governments have the responsibility to uphold their human rights obligations and to respect the standards. But the human rights of all people, in all countries, also require—unquestionably—our collective attention,” he said.

“Human rights are universal, indivisible and interdependent. If states pick and choose which rights they will uphold, the entire structure is undermined,” he said.

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http://opinion.inquirer.net/97438/eu-joins-call-for-halt-to-killings-in-drug-war
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Maybe Mr. Duterte should make peace with drug dealers. United together, marketing and selling drugs solely in European markets. That will make everyone happy. I know I have been sarcastic.

Oh, by the way, about 150 years ago, the same Europe condemned China for confiscating opium as a violation of commercial freedom.
 
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PH is making all the right choices-there's a saying 'if you cant beat your enemy- join him'.

by leaning towards the Chinese camp vs the West, that's what he's doing. I believe the PH is going to receive massive investment by the burgeoning treasure chest(rememeber the West rejects Chinese investment under the false guise of 'security reasons') benefits under his leadership
 
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PH is making all the right choices-there's a saying 'if you cant beat your enemy- join him'.

by leaning towards the Chinese camp vs the West, that's what he's doing. I believe the PH is going to receive massive investment by the burgeoning treasure chest(rememeber the West rejects Chinese investment under the false guise of 'security reasons') benefits under his leadership
He offended everybody except China. So no choice :enjoy: But it's a good choice anyway.
 
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Duterte turns ire on EU, calls them hypocrites and uses ‘F’ word
By: Leila B. Salaverria
Philippine Daily Inquirer
08:01 PM September 20th, 2016



MANILA — President Duterte let loose a fresh string of tirades against the European Union, on Tuesday, after it called for a halt to extrajudicial killings of drug suspects in the Philippines.

“I read the condemnation of the EU against me. I will tell them, ‘**** you.’ You’re doing it in atonement for your sins,” Mr. Duterte said in a speech before local government officials in Davao City.

Duterte said members of the European Union have become strict about the behavior of other nations due to their “guilt feelings” over the atrocities they had committed in the past.

He also called them hypocrites, as he added that a check of encyclopedias would show what European countries have done, he said. For instance, France and Great Britain had killed Arabs, he said.

“And then EU now has the gall to condemn me. I repeat it, ‘**** you,’” he said.

Mr. Duterte also asked who he was supposed to have killed in the Philippines.

Assuming accusations against him were true, and there were over 1,000 killed in the country, he asked who were the people killed.

“Who are they? Criminals? You call it genocide? How many did they kill?” he asked. SFM

-----
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/14...e-on-eu-calls-them-hypocrites-and-uses-f-word
-----




The reason why Duterte lashes back at the EU...



EU joins call for halt to killings in drug war
By: Amando Doronila
01:36 AM September 19th, 2016


CANBERRA—The European Union has joined the global call on the Philippine government to “put an end to the current wave of extrajudicial executions and killings” of drug suspects.

Alarmed at the rising death toll in President Duterte’s brutal crackdown on drug syndicates, the EU Parliament directed its delegation in the Philippines and the embassies of 28 European countries in Manila to monitor rights abuses following his declaration on Sept. 3 of a “state of national emergency on account of lawlessness.”

Mr. Duterte placed the entire country under a state of national emergency after a bomb exploded at a night market in his hometown, Davao City, on Sept 2, killing 15 people and injuring 69 others.

In an extraordinary intervention, the EU lawmakers passed a five-page resolution expressing concern over the appalling number of drug suspects killed by police and vigilantes since Mr. Duterte launched a crackdown on illegal drugs upon taking office on June 30. More than 3,000 people have been killed in just over two months. Mr. Duterte has pledged to eradicate the drugs scourge in three to six months of his presidency.

The EU members represent the largest bloc of Western democracies, including Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg, Czech Republic, Sweden, Portugal and Finland.

The EU intervention aligned with a number of states (including the United States), the United Nations and international human rights watchdog organizations that have called on the Philippines to end the extrajudicial killings.

This growing concerted global demand to end the extrajudicial executions has put the Philippine government at risk of inviting international sanctions, including either diplomatic or economic, and isolation if it continued to defy or ignore the calls.

Without directly blaming the government, the EU lawmakers said they believed Mr. Duterte’s incendiary public statements had encouraged mass murders involving drug traffickers and users.

“President Duterte repeatedly urged law enforcement agencies and the public to kill suspected drug traffickers who did not surrender as well as drug users,” the EU resolution said.

“President Duterte publicly stated he would not pursue law enforcement officers and citizens who killed drug dealers and who resisted arrest,” it added.


No to death penalty

According to wire services reports, the EU Parliament adopted the resolution dealing with extrajudicial killings in the Philippines based on the Partnership Cooperation Agreement signed by the European Union and the Philippines in 2014, to advance engagement on political, trade, security, environment and human rights issues.

The agreement commits the Philippines to uphold the rule of law, social democracy, as well as international human rights conventions.

The EU Parliament also emphasized that ending the extrajudicial killings of drug suspects was vital to the Philippines’ holding the chairmanship of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) in 2017.

The lawmakers pointed out that “President Duterte has announced that during the Philippines’ chairmanship, we (the government) will highlight Asean as a model of regionalism and global player, with the interest of the people at its core.”

They also called on the Philippine Congress “to abstain from reintroducing the death penalty (which Mr. Duterte has endorsed) and from lowering the minimum age of criminal liability.”

The EU Parliament said that based on “all empirical evidence, the death penalty does not reduce the drug delinquency and would destroy a great achievement of the Philippine justice system.”

It directed its delegation in the Philippines to provide wide assistance to the Philippine government to implement measures in line with its commitment to international human rights obligations.


Lack of understanding

On another front, Mr. Duterte came under fire from the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights for speaking against and opposing human rights institutions and investigations.

Speaking at the 33rd session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday, High Commissioner Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said, “The President of the Philippines’ statements of scorn for international human rights display a striking lack of understanding of our human rights institutions and principles which keep societies safe.”

Al Hussein pointed out that “fair and impartial rule of law is the foundation of public confidence and security” and “empowering police forces to shoot to kill any individual whom they claim to suspect of drug crimes, with or without evidence, undermines justice.”

He emphasized, “The people of the Philippines have a right to judicial institutions that are impartial, and operate under due process guarantees; and they have a right to a police that serves justice. I strongly recommend the Philippines to extend an invitation to the special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions.”

Al Hussein said that governments had accused human rights institutions of interfering in the affairs of sovereign nations.

“Are human rights exclusively a national issue? Governments have the responsibility to uphold their human rights obligations and to respect the standards. But the human rights of all people, in all countries, also require—unquestionably—our collective attention,” he said.

“Human rights are universal, indivisible and interdependent. If states pick and choose which rights they will uphold, the entire structure is undermined,” he said.

------
http://opinion.inquirer.net/97438/eu-joins-call-for-halt-to-killings-in-drug-war
------

now do you begin to see what China has been going through and taking a lot of shit from Europe and US for the past 30 years on various issues.
 
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now do you begin to see what China has been going through and taking a lot of shit from Europe and US for the past 30 years on various issues.

Economic relations between the PH and China is inevitable, but that doesn't mean every Filipino will agree with your government in regards to the territorial disputes.
 
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Duterte turns ire on EU, calls them hypocrites and uses ‘F’ word
By: Leila B. Salaverria
Philippine Daily Inquirer
08:01 PM September 20th, 2016



MANILA — President Duterte let loose a fresh string of tirades against the European Union, on Tuesday, after it called for a halt to extrajudicial killings of drug suspects in the Philippines.

“I read the condemnation of the EU against me. I will tell them, ‘**** you.’ You’re doing it in atonement for your sins,” Mr. Duterte said in a speech before local government officials in Davao City.

Duterte said members of the European Union have become strict about the behavior of other nations due to their “guilt feelings” over the atrocities they had committed in the past.

He also called them hypocrites, as he added that a check of encyclopedias would show what European countries have done, he said. For instance, France and Great Britain had killed Arabs, he said.

“And then EU now has the gall to condemn me. I repeat it, ‘**** you,’” he said.

Mr. Duterte also asked who he was supposed to have killed in the Philippines.

Assuming accusations against him were true, and there were over 1,000 killed in the country, he asked who were the people killed.

“Who are they? Criminals? You call it genocide? How many did they kill?” he asked. SFM

-----
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/14...e-on-eu-calls-them-hypocrites-and-uses-f-word
-----




The reason why Duterte lashes back at the EU...



EU joins call for halt to killings in drug war
By: Amando Doronila
01:36 AM September 19th, 2016


CANBERRA—The European Union has joined the global call on the Philippine government to “put an end to the current wave of extrajudicial executions and killings” of drug suspects.

Alarmed at the rising death toll in President Duterte’s brutal crackdown on drug syndicates, the EU Parliament directed its delegation in the Philippines and the embassies of 28 European countries in Manila to monitor rights abuses following his declaration on Sept. 3 of a “state of national emergency on account of lawlessness.”

Mr. Duterte placed the entire country under a state of national emergency after a bomb exploded at a night market in his hometown, Davao City, on Sept 2, killing 15 people and injuring 69 others.

In an extraordinary intervention, the EU lawmakers passed a five-page resolution expressing concern over the appalling number of drug suspects killed by police and vigilantes since Mr. Duterte launched a crackdown on illegal drugs upon taking office on June 30. More than 3,000 people have been killed in just over two months. Mr. Duterte has pledged to eradicate the drugs scourge in three to six months of his presidency.

The EU members represent the largest bloc of Western democracies, including Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg, Czech Republic, Sweden, Portugal and Finland.

The EU intervention aligned with a number of states (including the United States), the United Nations and international human rights watchdog organizations that have called on the Philippines to end the extrajudicial killings.

This growing concerted global demand to end the extrajudicial executions has put the Philippine government at risk of inviting international sanctions, including either diplomatic or economic, and isolation if it continued to defy or ignore the calls.

Without directly blaming the government, the EU lawmakers said they believed Mr. Duterte’s incendiary public statements had encouraged mass murders involving drug traffickers and users.

“President Duterte repeatedly urged law enforcement agencies and the public to kill suspected drug traffickers who did not surrender as well as drug users,” the EU resolution said.

“President Duterte publicly stated he would not pursue law enforcement officers and citizens who killed drug dealers and who resisted arrest,” it added.


No to death penalty

According to wire services reports, the EU Parliament adopted the resolution dealing with extrajudicial killings in the Philippines based on the Partnership Cooperation Agreement signed by the European Union and the Philippines in 2014, to advance engagement on political, trade, security, environment and human rights issues.

The agreement commits the Philippines to uphold the rule of law, social democracy, as well as international human rights conventions.

The EU Parliament also emphasized that ending the extrajudicial killings of drug suspects was vital to the Philippines’ holding the chairmanship of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) in 2017.

The lawmakers pointed out that “President Duterte has announced that during the Philippines’ chairmanship, we (the government) will highlight Asean as a model of regionalism and global player, with the interest of the people at its core.”

They also called on the Philippine Congress “to abstain from reintroducing the death penalty (which Mr. Duterte has endorsed) and from lowering the minimum age of criminal liability.”

The EU Parliament said that based on “all empirical evidence, the death penalty does not reduce the drug delinquency and would destroy a great achievement of the Philippine justice system.”

It directed its delegation in the Philippines to provide wide assistance to the Philippine government to implement measures in line with its commitment to international human rights obligations.


Lack of understanding

On another front, Mr. Duterte came under fire from the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights for speaking against and opposing human rights institutions and investigations.

Speaking at the 33rd session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday, High Commissioner Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said, “The President of the Philippines’ statements of scorn for international human rights display a striking lack of understanding of our human rights institutions and principles which keep societies safe.”

Al Hussein pointed out that “fair and impartial rule of law is the foundation of public confidence and security” and “empowering police forces to shoot to kill any individual whom they claim to suspect of drug crimes, with or without evidence, undermines justice.”

He emphasized, “The people of the Philippines have a right to judicial institutions that are impartial, and operate under due process guarantees; and they have a right to a police that serves justice. I strongly recommend the Philippines to extend an invitation to the special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions.”

Al Hussein said that governments had accused human rights institutions of interfering in the affairs of sovereign nations.

“Are human rights exclusively a national issue? Governments have the responsibility to uphold their human rights obligations and to respect the standards. But the human rights of all people, in all countries, also require—unquestionably—our collective attention,” he said.

“Human rights are universal, indivisible and interdependent. If states pick and choose which rights they will uphold, the entire structure is undermined,” he said.

------
http://opinion.inquirer.net/97438/eu-joins-call-for-halt-to-killings-in-drug-war
------
As much as i disagree with Duterte's choice of words now and then, i like it how he's extremely to the point. EU likes to blabber about 'human rights' when it comes to terrorism and drug pushers in developing countries, just to slow down/stop their fight against terrorism and drugs. Philippines should do what it deems effective and ignore the words of the EU that only talks from their safe distant comfortable chairs.
 
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Economic relations between the PH and China is inevitable, but that doesn't mean every Filipino will agree with your government in regards to the territorial disputes.
There is no dispute because Huangyan Island are in China's historical records before PN was even a nation. It was your old government + US stirring up trouble. I think it's time that the right wing Filipinos just let that go and focus on cooperation with Russia and China.
 
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There is no dispute because Huangyan Island are in China's historical records before PN was even a nation. It was your old government + US stirring up trouble. I think it's time that the right wing Filipinos just let that go and focus on cooperation with Russia and China.

You cannot force everyone to follow what your government wants.

There will be people who oppose certain issues.
 
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The Pinoys have elected a responsible leader this time. The US pivot strategy has totally backfired meanwhile Duterte has voiced his dissatisfaction towards American and EU's hypocritical criticism. He knows what's best for his country, says no to expensive destructive flying machinery, wants nothing more than improving the damaged relationship with the big boss of Asia. War is not an option against a beast like China. These are wise words coming from a rational head of state. It sets the perfect example for the other SEA countries how to behave towards the mighty Dragon.
 
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Will it be President Duterte to strike the last nail on the "Rebalance to Asia" even before Hillary suffers another brain damage and Obama leaves the office to a triumphant Trump?

Heavens, how things change in a short span of time! US was forming an coalition of the willing armada against China in the SCS and ECS. Now, their regime has been reduced to yet another (bad) V.2 copy of Britain's "Opium opening up" on China.

At that time, China had no body but its own national dynamics to stand up against British savagery and barbarism. Today, the Philippines has a sizeable portion of the world polities backing him up, albeit silently.
 
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The EU got what they deserve.

79b9818ec8c6478791a72381a72551ae_18.jpg


digong.jpg
 
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Describing the EU as hypocrites, Duterte said the grouping "has the gall to condemn me" despite historical records showing what member countries, such as France and Britain, have done in the Middle East.

He said the EU is trying to "atone" for its sins and "guilt feelings" over occupying other countries in the past.

"I repeat it, 'F**k you!'," Duterte said as he raised his right hand and gave a middle finger to applause from the audience.


via Imgflip Meme Generator

The EU had urged the Philippine government to investigate abuses "in full compliance with national and international obligations and respect for human rights".

"President Duterte repeatedly urged law enforcement agencies and the public to kill suspected drug traffickers who did not surrender, as well as drug users," the EU politicians said in a resolution.

https://sg.news.yahoo.com/philippines-duterte-unleashes-more-profanity-eu-195956117.html
 
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