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Rodrigo Duterte, New Philippine President

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Rodrigo Duterte Sworn in as New Philippine President
2016-06-30 12:21:29 Xinhua Web Editor: Zhang Xu

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Rodrigo Duterte was sworn in as the 16th president of the Philippines on Thursday. [Photo: Agencies]


Rodrigo Duterte was sworn in as the 16th president of the Philippines on Thursday.

Supreme Court Associate Justice Bienvenido Reyes administered the oath of office at the Rizal Ceremonial Hall in Malacanang, the presidential palace. Duterte's children, namely Paolo, Sara, Sebastian and Veronica stood witness. He signed his oath of office afterwards.

The former Davao City Mayor won the Philippine presidential election held on May 9 with 16,601,997 votes, a lead of almost 7 million over the second-placer Manuel Roxas.

In his inaugural speech, Duterte promised the Filipinos that his administration will make a change to the country, a message he has been sending out since he started presidential campaign.

"Change must start with us and in us... We have become our own worst enemies, and we must have the courage and the will to change ourselves," he said.

To make a difference, Duterte vowed to fight criminality, the sale of illegal drugs, and corruption.

"I have seen how corruption bled government of funds. I have seen how illegal drugs destroy individuals and ruin families' relationships...Look at these from that perspective and tell me that I am wrong," said Duterte, addressing the public concern that his methods of fighting criminality unorthodox.

He assured the Filipinos that he will adhere to due process and the rule of law.

"I know the limits of the power and authority of the president. I know what is legal and what is not," he said.

Duterte has been carrying out his anti-crime program which includes plans to reintroduce the death penalty, issuing shoot-to-kill orders to the security services and offering them bounties for the bodies of drug dealers.

Maria Leonor Robredo was sworn in as Vice President earlier on Thursday in Quezon City where she will hold office for a six-year term.

In her inaugural speech, the 52-year-old politician called for unity and promised to bring prosperity to the Filipinos, especially the poor.
 
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President Xi Congratulates New Philippines President
2016-06-30 16:39:47 Xinhua Web Editor: Meng Xue

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday sent a message to new Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to congratulate him for his inauguration as the 16th head of state of the Republic of the Philippines.

In the congratulatory message, Xi said that he is willing to work with Duterte to push for improvement of relations between their two countries.

Hailing China and the Philippines as each other's neighbor that cannot be moved away, Xi said good-neighborliness and friendship is a historical inheritance for the thousands-year-long history of China-Philippine relations, which is also a right direction that must be insisted in the development of bilateral ties.

Duterte was sworn in as the 16th president of the Republic of the Philippines earlier Thursday.
 
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10 ways Duterte plans to change the Philippines
Published June 30, 2016

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Rodrigo Duterte was sworn in as Philippine president on Thursday after a landslide election victory last month built on a series of bold and controversial pledges.

Here are 10 ways Duterte plans to change the Philippines during his six years as president:

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War on crime

Duterte has said he must take extreme measures to stop the Philippines becoming a narco-state. Security forces will be given shoot-to-kill orders. Bounties will be paid for killing drug dealers. Ordinary citizens will also be encouraged to kill suspects. The death penalty will be restored, by hanging.

Federalism

Duterte, who rails against "Imperial Manila", intends to change the centralized government to a federal system in which newly created states would have a large degree of autonomy. They would also be able to keep most of their revenues. Doing so will require rewriting the Constitution.

End rebellions

Duterte insists he can end decades-old Muslim and communist rebellions, which have claimed tens of thousands of lives. Peace talks with the communists are set to start this month. He expects federalism will appease Muslim rebels, who want autonomy.

Family planning

He wants to slow the Philippines' fast-growing population, which recently surged past 100 million. He says families should aim for a maximum of three children. Duterte wants government agencies to supply the poor with free condoms and birth control pills. A 2012 law allowing for that has not been fully implemented, partly due to opposition from the powerful Catholic church.

Address inequality

Duterte describes himself as a "socialist", and has vowed to change an economic model that has created one of Asia's biggest rich-poor divides. Roughly one quarter of the population live below the poverty line. He says federalism is one key to this. But he also plans to continue with the successful macro-economic policies of his predecessor, Benigno Aquino.

Social discipline

Duterte plans to roll out a nationwide curfew on children being on the streets alone late at night. He also wants to ban alcohol being served in public past midnight, and stop people from singing karaoke -- a national passion -- in public late in the late evening.

End graft

Duterte has promised to rid government agencies, police and the military of deep-rooted corruption. But aside from general statements, such as corrupt officials should "retire or die", he has not explained how he would fix one of the Philippines' most intractable problems.

Marcos burial

Duterte intends to allow late dictator Ferdinand Marcos to be buried at a cemetery for national heroes, saying this will help end decades of social division over the issue. But human rights victims say this will help whitewash the dictator's crimes.

Foreign investment

Duterte is in favor of changing the constitution to lift restrictive foreign investment laws. Duterte told telcos to improve one of the region's slowest Internet connections or face competition from foreign players. But he is opposed to foreign ownership of land.

Closer China ties

After relations with China plummeted during Aquino's term over a South China Sea territorial dispute, Duterte has said he wants "friendly" ties with Beijing. Aquino refused to hold direct negotiations with China over the maritime dispute, but Duterte is open to one-on-one talks. He is also courting Chinese investment in infrastructure. —Agence France-Presse

- See more at: http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/stor...o-change-the-philippines#sthash.ycT62MAP.dpuf

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If the collective West / US criticize him and shine a negative light on Philippines newly elected president then that should give it away immediately that he has the best interest of his country and people at heart and is someone China should stand behind and work together with.

Don't let them play divide and conquer.
 
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Duterte reveals no ‘taunt or flaunt’ China policy
by AFP
June 30, 2016 (updated)

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Manila, Philippines – New Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said Thursday he would not “taunt or flaunt” a favourable ruling in a highly sensitive legal challenge against Beijing over a South China Sea dispute.

But it was unclear whether Duterte intended to telegraph his soft diplomatic punches, with his comments made during his first cabinet meeting that was broadcast live on national television before being cut abruptly during the discussions on China.

After discussions on climate change, cutting red tape and airport congestion, the meeting turned to an imminent ruling by a UN-backed tribunal on a case filed by the Philippines’ previous government against Beijing over competing claims to the South China Sea.

In comments that are likely to please Beijing, Duterte issued instructions not to “taunt or flaunt” a verdict in favour of the Philippines.

Foreign Affairs Secretary, Perfecto Yasay, then revealed some foreign governments had been urging the Philippines to “make stronger statements”.

“I am averse to that idea and I told them in no unmistakable terms,” Yasay said.

Yasay did not name the governments that had been pushing for stronger statements, but described them as “those who are concerned about ensuring freedom of navigation”.

The United States has been one of the most vocal nations calling for China to ensure “freedom of navigation” in the South China Sea.

Yasay then started discussing what the Philippines should do if China “will dig in and put us to the test” but then abruptly stopped.

Almost immediately afterwards the broadcast, which was distributed by the state broadcaster and carried live on commercial networks as well as Internet portals for about 40 minutes, was also cut.

The cabinet meeting took place a few hours after Duterte was sworn in as the Philippines’ president for a six-year term.

He took over from Benigno Aquino, who put the Philippines’ long-running dispute with China at the top of his foreign policy agenda, publicly drawing comparisons between Beijing’s expansionist efforts in the sea and Nazi Germany’s take over of parts of Europe.

Aquino also launched the legal action with the UN-backed tribunal in The Hague, arguing that China’s claims to most of the strategically vital and resource-rich sea were in violation of international law.

China’s claims extend close to the Philippines’ coast, as well as those of other Southeast Asian countries.

The tribunal is set to issue a verdict on July 12.

Infuriated by Aquino’s strategy, China has vowed to ignore the tribunal’s ruling and repeatedly expressed hopes of better ties with the Philippines under Duterte.

Duterte’s media aides were not immediately available to comment over whether the discussion on China was meant to be televised.
 
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IMHO, President Duterte will be good for the Philippines.......

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Philippines' New President Expected to Be Pragmatic in China Approach
2016-06-30 12:46:39 | Xinhua | Web Editor: Zhang Xu

New Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is expected to take a pragmatic approach to the South China Sea disputes with China, analysts in Manila have said, noting that Manila will benefit a lot from a friendly relationship with Beijing.

Duterte was sworn in as the country's 16th president on Thursday.

The government of former Philippine President Benigno Aquino III filed an arbitration case against China in 2013, despite the agreement his country had reached with China on resolving their South China Sea disputes through bilateral negotiations.

China has refused to participate in the proceedings and declared that it will never recognize the verdict, stressing that the tribunal has no jurisdiction because the case is in essence related to territorial sovereignty and maritime delimitation.

"Every incoming president, every incoming administration has advantage of a fresh start," diplomat Lauro Baja said Wednesday. "And by the pronouncements of Duterte, he seems to be more open to talking to China than his predecessor (President Benigno Aquino III)."

The South China Sea issue is "the most sensitive" foreign policy issue for Duterte and his administration, he said, adding, "What I believe is this: there must be some lines of communication between China and the Philippines which does not exist now."

Political science professor Benito Lim said Duterte is still in the process of "trying to sort things out" when it comes to the maritime disputes.

"There are two things that can only happen: either we talk to China or we continue this conflict. But we have to ask ourselves: what did we get from this long conflict? What's wrong if we talk to them?" he said.

Lim noted that the new administration must exercise flexibility and have an open, clear mind if it wants to deal with China.

"It's about time we think seriously what exactly we want in that region instead of carrying a quarrel that is leading to something that is not constructive," he said.

Asked whether he will see a change in the relationship between Manila and Beijing, Lim said it depends on what the Duterte administration will do.

"The Department of Foreign Affairs and the people there should ask themselves the questions: What exactly do we want to do with the South China Sea issue? What are we going to ask for? We cannot say that it is ours ... Standoff again. There's nothing we can gain from that position. Nothing progressive will take place," Lim said.

"So our leadership need to assess and think very carefully what we need and what is most beneficial for the country if we sit down and talk," he said.

Duterte said last month that he wanted China to help improve the country's poor infrastructure by building a railway system that links the entire country.

Clarita Carlos, a professor with the University of the Philippines and president of the Centre for Asia Pacific Studies Inc, said Duterte is doing a "brilliant" strategy in dealing with China.

"What is important is we keep on talking and engaging constructively with China," Carlos said, predicting that the relations between the two countries will improve.
 
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I am fairly confident that Rodrigo Duterte will be a good for the Philippines compared to Aquino.

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Commentary: All Eyes on New Philippine President for Repairing China Ties
2016-06-30 13:15:53 Xinhua Web Editor: Zhang Xu
by Xinhua Writer Sun Ding

As Rodrigo Duterte takes over as Philippine president on Thursday, sparks of hope have arisen for a rapprochement between his country and China after relations soured during his predecessor's tenure.

Yet whether those sparks can turn into flames heating up bilateral relations depends on whether Duterte can translate his positive signals into concrete and effective action.

The tough-talking former mayor of Davao City in southern Philippines has pledged sweeping policy changes on both domestic and diplomatic fronts.

Since winning election, he has made a string of overtures on Philippines-China relations, signaling that mending fences with China would be a foreign policy priority. He has said that China will be the first country he visits after taking office.

Such gestures are encouraging, particularly against the backdrop of the strained bilateral relations during the presidency of Benigno Aquino III, whose government repeatedly stoked tensions over the South China Sea.

In violation of Manila's agreement with Beijing to solve their South China Sea disputes via bilateral negotiations, the Aquino government unilaterally launched a compulsory arbitration case against China, not only undercutting its own trustworthiness but further complicating the row and the bilateral relationship.

Yet as many observers have noted, Duterte is also seeking U.S. support on the South China Sea issue among others and help in building the island country's regional clout.

So the new president still keeps his cards close to his chest. Whether he means what he has said about pursuing bilateral talks with China over the South China Sea disputes remains to be seen.

However, although the arbitration case has stolen much of the limelight on China-Philippines relations, the political farce staged by the Aquino government is far from being the whole picture of bilateral ties.

In 2015, China stood as the Philippines' largest source of imports second-largest trading partner, and third-largest export market. Bilateral trade reached 45.65 billion U.S. dollars, up 2.7 percent. Those figures offer just a glimpse of the close interaction between the two neighbors.

The incoming Philippine government has also voiced hopes for cooperating with China to develop the Southeast Asian country's infrastructure. Duterte has even reportedly said that he might seek joint exploration in the South China Sea, a principle China has long been advocating.

With China having rightly kept the door of dialogue open, the ball is in Manila's court. If Duterte's words about putting China-Philippines ties back on the right track are genuine, it is time for him to act.
 
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Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte tells people to 'go ahead and kill' drug addicts

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Newly inaugurated Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has urged communist rebels to start killing drug traffickers and people to kill addicts, adding another layer to a controversial war on crime in which he has warned thousands will die.

The communists' armed wing, the 4,000-strong New People's Army, is known for assassinating civilians deemed to have committed so-called crimes against the people — however its courts and summary executions are illegal.

"Drugs have reached the hinterlands ... what if you use your kangaroo courts to kill them to speed up the solution to our problem," Mr Duterte, a lawyer and former city prosecutor, said in a speech before the military's top brass in Manila.

In a late-night speech on Thursday to a slum community in the capital attended by only a few journalists, Mr Duterte also called on ordinary Filipinos to kill drug addicts, which is also illegal.

"If you know of any addicts, go ahead and kill them yourself," he told a crowd of about 500 people.

Mr Duterte also vowed to kill drug traffickers, using foul language he promised in recent weeks to "tone down" as president.

"These sons of whores are destroying our children," the 71-year-old said.

"I warn you, don't go into that, even if you're a policeman, because I will really kill you."


'Duterte must break rhetoric as president'

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A former mayor of the southern city of Davao, Mr Duterte had alternately denied and confirmed running death squads there that summarily executed suspected criminals.

Mr Duterte won May's election in a landslide after a campaign dominated by his pledge to end crime within six months, promising to do so by unleashing security forces with shoot-to-kill orders.

In his inauguration speech on Thursday, Mr Duterteinsisted his adherence to the rule of law was "uncompromising", apparently seeking to assuage concerns from human rights groups that he planned to orchestrate mass extrajudicial killings.

Amnesty International said it was encouraged by Mr Duterte's inauguration pledge to honour the country's obligations under international law.

"But now he is in power, he needs to lend substance to those words and break with his earlier rhetoric," Rafendi Djamin, the rights group's director for South-East Asia and the Pacific said in a statement.

Before dawn on Friday a bullet-riddled body was found in a Manila slum with a sign on it that read: "I am a Chinese drug lord," local police said.

The murder bore all the hallmarks of an extrajudicial killing, which would make it the first of Mr Duterte's presidency.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-07-...te-urges-communists-to-kill-criminals/7562912



Duterte to PNP: Kill 1,000, I’ll protect you
By Christina Mendez (The Philippine Star) | Updated July 2, 2016

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FOURTH STAR: President Duterte promotes newly appointed Philippine National Police chief Ronald de la Rosa to director general, a four-star rank, during turnover rites at Camp Crame in Quezon City yesterday. KIWI BULACLAC

Bato warns bad cops: Nov. 2 will be your new birthday

MANILA, Philippines - Killing a thousand people in the line of duty is justified.

This was the message of President Duterte yesterday to police personnel as he assured them that he has their back in their mission of keeping the public safe.

“Do your duty, and if in the process you kill one thousand persons because you were doing your duty, I will protect you. And if they try to impeach me, I will hurry the process and we will go out of the service together,” Duterte said.

He conveyed the message during ceremonies for Director General Roland de la Rosa’s assumption of command of the Philippine National Police (PNP) .

Duterte said he would be ready to die for police and protect them.

“Do not bulls**t me… do your duty, I will die for you,” he told the police top brass during the command turnover ceremony held at the PNP headquarters at Camp Crame.

Duterte stressed that the drug menace poses a “clear and present danger” that needs to be addressed with the help of the military.

He cited the executive order of former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo that raised the threat of narcotics as a national security concern.

Duterte said this is necessary to prevent the country from being run by drug lords, like some countries in South America.

“Where do you find a country, a mayor is inaugurated in the morning and in the afternoon, he is executed? That will not happen, that will not happen during my watch. I said I will be harsh,” he said.

Without directly saying he is giving law enforcers a field day to kill drug offenders, Duterte said the killings should be justified – like when the suspects fight it out with lawmen.

If the suspect resists arrest or fights back, Duterte said that constitutes self-defense for the police.

“But for all, about this killing, extrajudicial killing, may I again bring you back to your fundamentals,” Duterte said.

“About the only time that a police officer or any civilian for that matter acting in defense for himself or for a stranger, is that you announce your authority or at least the crime or the wrong that the other guy has committed and will just announce that you are arrested and if you are a civilian you can do that,” he added.

Duterte said a policeman is justified to shoot the offender if his life is in danger.

“And if there is a resistance that would place your life in jeopardy, then by all means shoot and shoot him dead. That is my order,” he told the policemen led by Dela Rosa.

Dela Rosa, known by his moniker “Bato” (Rock), found his shoulder boards heavier as he received three more stars yesterday.

Dela Rosa was promoted from the rank of chief superintendent – or the equivalent of brigadier general in the military – to director general or full general in the military.

Duterte formally installed Dela Rosa as the 21st chief of the PNP.

The PNP leadership said there is no legal impediment in giving Dela Rosa the highest police rank as he takes over from Ricardo Marquez, who retired last Tuesday.

Count by the hours

Duterte later told the military of his “zero tolerance” for illegal drugs.

“Where can you find a government where drug trafficking is being controlled inside the Bilibid prison? And it is like being slapped many times. And how it came about is really, well I would know, by neglect,” Duterte said in yesterday’s turnover of command for the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) at Camp Aguinaldo.

Duterte made the campaign promise to eradicate crime and illegal drugs in the first six months of his presidency.

But in his speech during the PNP turnover ceremony, Duterte seemed to backtrack on his timetable.

“I might not be able to stop it on time, on the sixth month. But certainly after six months and one day, I hope this would all end,” he said.

Duterte during his campaign had mentioned the New Bilibid Prison (NBP) where he said thousands of drug suspects are detained for their illegal activities but still continue their illicit trade.

Duterte claimed one-fourth of the market for illegal drugs came from the NBP. He said he would have NBP burned to the ground to put an end to one source of illegal drugs in the country.

The President also criticized how the NBP appears to have been controlled by drug operators.

“How can it happen that when you inspect Bilibid, you have to ask permission from the idiot inside. This is my first day. I’m warning them there, they have the TVs there inside,” Duterte said, referring to the drug lords inside NBP.

“So, start counting the days…you are putting the government to shame. It’s like you slapped us many times… Start counting the hours. Do not count by the day, I do not want you counting the day,” Duterte warned.

He also cited as a problem the number of kidnap-for-ransom cases in the country.

“These are the things that we have to stop and that is why I said I would be harsh, not cruel, but I would be harsh and I have no tolerance for drugs. Zero. So, this is the fight that we have now. Those of you who are on vacation from the fields in Mindanao and in the Visayas… you might want just to join the hunt for them. We will eliminate the drug lords once and for all. We have to stop this practice in Bilibid,” Duterte stressed.

Duterte reiterated that he would risk everything to put an end to the drug problem.

“If you destroy my country, I will kill you. If you destroy our children, I will kill you. If I am asked by anybody, including the Commission on Human Rights, I do not know you,” Duterte said.

“I’m not threatening you. I’m just telling you that there is always a time. For us, the security forces, the Armed forces and the police, there is always a time. We can only take so much insult. We can only take so much... all that we could stomach. But me? I already feel like vomiting,” he added.

Scalawags

Duterte also warned scalawags in the police force that the end is coming.

“Let me tell you now, I will not run this country with a corrupt police. Mag-aaway tayo diyan (I will not accept that) and I do not want to demean you or to take anything from you,” he said.

Duterte said the PNP will have a major revamp.

He also said he would monitor the careers of all policemen, particularly those involved in illegal activities.

“I said do not mess with me. I am not challenging anybody but do not ever, you know, take it against me because I will really take it against you. You commit crimes then you are charged, you go AWOL, ” he said.

“You better resign, you have no more future in the police.”

Duterte also warned against corruption in the police force, mentioning the practice of converting gasoline allocations to cash and doctored liquidation reports.

“So beginning from now, I will not tolerate, zero tolerance, for abuses committed by the law enforcement agencies, including the National Bureau of Investigation,” he said.

“Do not do it! Ever, ever again.”

He directed all officers, from the regional director down to precinct commanders, not to use their posts in raising funds.

He also advised police officers against having their pictures taken with people suspected of criminal activities.

“Kindly, most kindly avoid the company. You know these drug lords and a budding criminal would always want to have their pictures taken with the mayor, with the commanders, with the military, with the police, just to build a reputation around him of invincibility,” he said. “That’s how it is done. I know, you know that I know, and we all know.”

Duterte also warned lawmen involved in illegal drugs.

“I know your life story. I know how you handle your work and I know how good you are. But I also know sometimes you can become a bad boy in the organization so beginning from now, I will not tolerate, zero tolerance for abuses committed by the law enforcement agencies,” Duterte said.

Slip of tongue

Barely 24 hours into office, Duterte could not avoid cursing during his two public appearances since he was sworn into office on Thursday.

Duterte was unable to stop himself from saying “p*** mo” in Filipino as he emphasized his frustration over how rampant drug use has affected the nation.

There were times that he also slowed down in the middle of his speech, obviously to prevent himself from cussing.

He also told policemen not to “bulls**t” him in his campaign against illegal drugs.

The President cursed during his speech at the Solidarity Dinner with the Poor held at the Delpan Sports Complex in Tondo, Manila the other night.

Duterte earned a few laughs when he merely nodded after the leader of the troops saluted after the welcoming honors at the PNP rites yesterday.

Nocturnal by nature, Duterte was able to attend early morning schedules – first during his own inauguration – and then the turnover ceremonies with the police. The events preceded command conferences with his top military and police officials.

During the campaign, the President explained that the media should not take his statements hook, line and sinker.

“You judge me, not by the cuss words, epithets and curses that you hear. Judge me for what I stand for, the values that I hold dear,” he was quoted as saying.
 
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Tony Blair is condemned by the Chilcot enquiry.
I wonder when the condemnation of George W Bush will start.


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Philippine President Blames US, UK for Middle East Violence
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JULY 8, 2016, 10:54 A.M. E.D.T.

MANILA, Philippines — The new Philippine president on Friday blamed U.S. intervention for the bloody conflicts in Iraq and other Middle Eastern countries in his latest criticism of Manila's closest security ally.

President Rodrigo Duterte suggested in a speech that intrusive policy was to blame for terrorist attacks on U.S. soil, saying, "It is not that the Middle East is exporting terrorism to America, America imported terrorism."

The U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, which was backed by Britain, led to Saddam Hussein's downfall but caused the oil-rich nation to descend into bloody factional strife, Duterte said, adding that America's action had no legal basis.

"They forced their way to Iraq ... look at Iraq now, look what happened to Libya, look what happened to Syria," he said. "People are being annihilated there including children."

"They destroyed the Middle East," Duterte told the Muslim community in southern Davao city in a ceremony marking the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

The former Davao mayor has said he would be a leftist president who would chart a foreign policy not dependent on the United States.

He has pointed out the benefits of nurturing friendly relations with Beijing, including a Chinese offer of financing railway projects in the Philippines. The country has had frosty ties with China under Duterte's predecessor, Benigno Aquino III, who bolstered security ties with the U.S. to deter China's aggressive actions in disputed South China Sea territories.

Duterte has given allies of communist rebels at least two key posts in his Cabinet as part of an effort to forge a peace deal with the Maoist insurgents, who have waged a Marxist insurgency for decades and are labeled terrorists by Washington.

Duterte's speech Friday centered on his plan to open peace talks with two large Muslim rebel groups in southern Mindanao region, homeland of minority Muslims in the largely Roman Catholic nation.

Duterte's plan includes shifting the country to a federal system that would give more autonomy and resources to regions like Mindanao, where Davao city is located. He called on Muslims to back his efforts.

"As a nation, we must sit down," he said. "Why will we kill each other?"

In the case of Abu Sayyaf militants, Duterte said he would not lump them with criminals, saying "these were the guys who were driven to desperation." He did not say how he would try to deal with the extremists although he has warned them in recent weeks to stop a wave of kidnappings for ransom or face "a reckoning one of these days."

Washington and Manila list the Abu Sayaf as a terrorist organization for bombings, ransom kidnappings and beheadings.

Despite Duterte's critical remarks, there has been no indication that he would move to change the country's robust defense ties with the United States.

The treaty allies hold large scale combat exercises each year and signed a 2014 defense pact that will allow the U.S. military to temporarily base troops and build and operate facilities in Philippine military camps, a move that was viewed with concern by Beijing.
 
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No kidding, this guy has balls.....
He is just too frank for his own good.


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Philippines leader calls US ambassador 'gay son of a whore'
Rodrigo Duterte has sparked a fresh diplomatic row with Washington who asked for clarification about his comments
Agence France-Presse
Wednesday 10 August 2016 15.50 AEST

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Filipino President Rodrigo Duterte has angered Washington with his language attacking the US ambassador to Manila.

The Philippines’ firebrand President Rodrigo Duterte has sparked a fresh diplomatic row with his colourful language, calling the US ambassador “gay” in comments that prompted Washington to summon Manila’s envoy to complain.

In the latest of series of tirades, Duterte used a local Tagalog language homophobic slur to express his displeasure with US Ambassador Philip Goldberg in televised comments made Friday.

“As you know, I’m fighting with (US Secretary of State John Kerry’s) ambassador. His gay ambassador, the son of a whore. He pissed me off,” Duterte said.

Duterte, 71, surged to power with a landslide in May following an incendiary campaign in which he gleefully used foul language to disrespect authority figures, from his local political rivals to the pope.

He first came into conflict with US envoy Goldberg on the campaign trail, after he said he wanted to rape a “beautiful” Australian missionary who was sexually assaulted and murdered in a 1989 prison riot in Davao, the city he ran for two decades.

Goldberg and the Australian ambassador both strongly criticised these comments.

“He meddled during the elections, giving statements here and there. He was not supposed to do that,” Duterte said Friday.

The US State Department said that the Filipino charge d’affaires, Patrick Chuasoto, had been summoned Monday to discuss Duterte’s comments.

“We had that conversation,” department spokeswoman Elizabeth Trudeau said.

“I think what we were seeking is perhaps a better understanding of why that statement was made,” she added.

Philippine foreign affairs spokesman Charles Jose confirmed the meeting but said Manila’s envoy had been “invited to the State Department to discuss the entire breadth of Philippines-US relations.”

“Philippine-US relations remain strong,” he told AFP Wednesday.

A former US colony, the Philippines and the United States have long shared a military treaty.
 
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No kidding, this guy has balls.....
He is just too frank for his own good.


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“As you know, I’m fighting with (US Secretary of State John Kerry’s) ambassador. His gay ambassador, the son of a whore. He pissed me off,” Duterte said.

Duterte sounds like an honest man here!
 
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All the Filipino drug pushers are running scared. But I don't think this is the right way to deal with them.
But then again, their country their rules.


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Rodrigo Duterte links 150 judges and politicians to drugs trade

Philippine president fires police and military officers named in nationally televised speech on Sunday

Sunday 7 August 201616.40 AEST

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Filipino president Rodrigo Duterte reads list of local government officials and police officers he says are involved in illegal drugs trading.

The Philippine president has publicly linked more than 150 judges, mayors, lawmakers and military personnel to illegal drugs, revoked their gun licences and asked them to surrender for investigation.

Rodrigo Duterte promptly fired members of the military and police he named and ordered government security personnel to be withdrawn from politicians he identified in his nationally televised speech early Sunday.

Duterte’s latest move ratchets up his war against drugs, which has already left hundreds of suspected dealers dead and more than 4,400 arrested in a month since he took office. Nearly 600,000 people have surrendered to authorities.

Duterte says he will take full responsibility if any of those he named turn out to be innocent.

Human Rights Watch, Stop Aids and International HIV/Aids Alliance are among more than 300 civil society groups that have signed joint letters to the International Narcotics Control Board and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime , calling on them to break their silence over the crackdown.

“We are calling on the UN drug control bodies to publicly condemn these atrocities in the Philippines. This senseless killing cannot be justified as a drug control measure,” said Ann Fordham, executive director of the International Drug Policy Consortium, which coordinated the letter.

“Their silence is unacceptable, while people are being killed on the streets day after day.”

During his campaign leading up to this year’s election, Duterte said 100,000 people would die in his crackdown, with so many dead bodies dumped in Manila Bay that fish there would grow fat from feeding on them. After his election win Duterte also launched a seemingly unprovoked attack against the UN.

“**** you UN, you can’t even solve the Middle East carnage ... couldn’t even lift a finger in Africa [with the] butchering [of] the black people. Shut up all of you,” he said.

Associated Press contributed to this report
 
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Duterte sounds like an honest man.
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Indeed he is an honest man.

In life, being too honest can get you into trouble sometimes.

As a President, I think he has to think more carefully what he says.

My advice - "engage brain before opening mouth."

More so, if it's a "mouth cannon".

:rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
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