UN Duterte Megathread - Following the exploits of a president straight out of the DC universe

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So if you haven't been following the news, Rodrigo Duterte, the President of the Philippines, is constantly stirring shit up. The biggest controversy about him by far is how he has repeatedly encouraged citizens to murder drug users (not even dealers, users). You see, the Philippines has a massive drug problem and drug addicts are despised for fueling the drug trade.

Just yesterday, a top UN official claimed said that Duterte should be investigated for murder, as he boasted that he had personally killed three suspected criminals. Today, Duterte responded to this statement... by threatening to raze the headquarters of the United Nations in New York City in response to those accusing him of human rights violations.

This is just a small sample of how crazy this dude is. I would not at all be surprised to learn that he himself does meth or snorts coke or something.
 
He actually praised Trump by saying he's a deep thinker. Just in case that Trump x Putin ship sinks down, there's still Duterte x Trump to fall back on.

Seems like it now:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippines-us-hold-annual-balikatan-military-drills-112753645.html


The Philippine military said Sunday it would hold annual exercises with US troops next month, reaffirming its commitment to the alliance despite cooling relations under President Rodrigo Duterte.

The 10-day exercises will be the first held under Duterte, who has suggested cancelling the drills and called for the withdrawal of American troops, putting into question Manila's 70-year-old alliance with Washington as he looks instead to court China.


The outspoken Filipino leader, who has earned international censure for a war on drugs that has seen thousands killed, has since softened his stance on working with the US military.

The annual military exercises, known as Balikatan (Shoulder-to-Shoulder), will now go ahead in May, focusing on counter-terrorism and disaster response as the Philippines battles Islamic militants in their lawless southern strongholds.

"It will be scenario-based like (preparing for) a big storm hitting the Philippines or the possibility of terrorism," Balikatan spokesman Major Celeste Frank Sayson told AFP.

"We are safe to say there will be no more live-fire exercises. We (will) focus on humanitarian and civil assistance."

In previous years Balikatan had evolved from counter-terrorism manoeuvres against Islamic militants to simulations of protecting or retaking territory, as a dispute with Beijing over islands in the South China Sea escalated.

But Duterte, who took office last year, has sought improved relations with China and has set aside the maritime row in favour of economic concessions.

Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana had said the exercises would refocus on fighting terrorism, which he described as the Philippines' top security problem.

The Philippines is battling Islamic militants and pirates in the conflict-torn south, where several groups have pledged allegiance to Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria.

Security forces in the past week clashed with the Abu Sayyaf kidnap-for-ransom group on a popular resort island, the first attack on a key Philippine tourist destination in recent years.
 
Now he calls nations that supports human rights bigots compared to the Middle East:

http://globalnation.inquirer.net/154986/duterte-calls-countries-big-human-rights-bigots

President Duterte on Monday called countries big on human rights “bigots,” unlike the Middle Eastern nations that made him feel very much welcome during his visit last week.

Mr. Duterte arrived early on Monday from a six-day trip to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Bahrain.

“What really impressed me very much is that I could not sense any kind of discrimination, unlike those pretentious ones, those who are crazy, those who like human rights. As it turned out, they are bigots,” he said on his arrival at Ninoy Aquino International Airport.

Mr. Duterte did not mention any country by name, but he has always vented his ire on the United States and the European Union for criticizing his brutal war on drugs, which has claimed the lives of thousands of drug suspects since he launched the crackdown after taking office at the end of June last year.

One hundred thirty-nine distressed Filipino migrant workers arrived ahead of Mr. Duterte, and they had a different story to tell.

Happy to be home
Arlene Roa, a native of Negros Occidental, cried as she took her seat at the arrival area where she and her fellow repatriated workers were gathered to meet the President.

“I’m just happy that I’m able to come home,” she told the Inquirer.

The 38-year-old was a household worker in Saudi Arabia for five years. But her female employer became abusive after the woman’s husband died.

Roa said she was forced to abandon her work and was an illegal alien for nearly two years before she found shelter at Bahay Kalinga, the halfway house for distressed Filipino women in Riyadh managed by the Department of Labor and Employment (Dole).

She stayed there for two weeks and then accepted amnesty from the Saudi government through the program “A Nation Without Illegal Expatriates,” which allows undocumented migrants to return to their home countries within 90 days without risk of detention.

“I don’t want to go back anymore,” Roa, mother of three college-age children, said.

She said she would try to put up a business instead.

Twenty-six-year-old Eddie Beira Jr. of Batangas province said he was a service crew waiter for two years but his employer was unable to get him a worker’s permit.

Impressed
He stayed at the Estiraha, Dole’s halfway house for men, for a month before taking the nine-hour plane ride home on Sunday.

Mr. Duterte had nothing but praises for the Middle Eastern countries he had visited.

“But what I have sensed especially is that there, they respect people. And there might have been some incidents but it could happen anywhere. Overall, all things being equal, there’s nothing I can say against the countries I have visited,” he said.

Saudi Arabia is “a bit more regimented, I would say, because it is really, they follow the, every direction of Islam,” he said.

“But the other states, especially Bahrain and Qatar, you can really move around and you can talk and you can sense that there is really a little of the freedom that the citizens enjoy which is shared by everybody,” he said.

Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III told reporters that Kuwait and Saudi Arabia have always been a concern for household workers because these are where most of the abuses take place.
 
https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippines-duterte-tours-russian-warship-133327067.html

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte toured a visiting Russian warship on Friday for the second time in barely four months as he highlighted his growing closeness to Moscow.

"The Russians are with me, I shall not be afraid," Duterte was quoted as saying during a visit to the Russian guided missile cruiser 'Varyag' which is on a port visit to Manila.

Duterte toured the ship, posing for pictures with Russian sailors and in front of the vessel's huge missile-launchers, on what was the fourth ever port call by a Russian naval ship to the Philippines.


Since taking office in June, Duterte -- who describes himself as a socialist -- has been distancing himself from the Philippines' traditional ally, the United States and moving closer to its rivals, China and Russia.

In an indication of these closer ties, two Russian ships led by the submarine-hunter Admiral Tributs, made a "goodwill visit" to Manila in January, when Duterte also toured the Russian vessel.

Duterte has said he plans to purchase military equipment from Russia rather than the United States and is due to visit in May to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Earlier, Philippine navy spokesman Captain Lued Lincuna said the visit of the Russians was "a manifestation of good relations with them, to enhance our maritime cooperation," he told reporters.

Captain Leo Miado, one of the Philippine naval officers overseeing the visit, said sailors from the two countries would engage in training, adding "we can view the advanced equipment of the Russian navy in line with our modernisation efforts."

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I guess DU30 is always ready for war:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/duterte-says-chinas-xi-threatened-war-philippines-drills-122340398.html

https://sneed.yimg.com/uu/api/res/1.2/JkLB_jALAPZm3nUss9QrLQ--/aD0zMDA7dz00NTA7c209MTthcHBpZD15dGFjaHlvbg--/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/Reuters/2017-05-19T133000Z_1_LYNXNPED4I0Z6_RTROPTP_2_CHINA-SILKROAD.JPG.cf.jpg
Chinese President Xi Jinping shakes hands with Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte in Beijing. REUTERS/Etienne Oliveau/Pool


By Manuel Mogato

MANILA (Reuters) - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said on Friday Chinese counterpart China Xi Jinping had warned him there would be war if Manila tried to enforce an arbitration ruling and drill for oil in a disputed part of the South China Sea.

In remarks that could infuriate China, Duterte hit back at domestic critics who said he has gone soft on Beijing by refusing to push it to comply with an award last year by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, which ruled largely in favor of the Philippines.

Duterte said he discussed it with Xi when the two met in Beijing on Monday, and got a firm, but friendly warning.

"We intend to drill oil there, if it's yours, well, that's your view, but my view is, I can drill the oil, if there is some inside the bowels of the earth because it is ours," Duterte said in a speech, recalling his conversation with Xi.

"His response to me, 'we're friends, we don't want to quarrel with you, we want to maintain the presence of warm relationship, but if you force the issue, we'll go to war."

Duterte has long expressed his admiration for Xi and said he would raise the arbitration ruling with him eventually, but needed first to strengthen relations between the two countries, which the Philippines is hoping will yield billions of dollars in Chinese loans and infrastructure investments.

The Hague award clarifies Philippine sovereign rights in its 200-mile Exclusive Economic Zone to access offshore oil and gas fields, including the Reed Bank, 85 nautical miles off its coast.

It also invalidated China's nine-dash line claim on its maps denoting sovereignty over most of the South China Sea.

Duterte has a reputation for his candid, at times incendiary, remarks and his office typically backpeddles on his behalf and blames the media for distorting his most controversial comments.


Duterte recalled the same story about his discussion with Xi on oil exploration in a recorded television show aired moments after the speech.

He said Xi told him "do not touch it".

He said Xi had promised that the arbitration ruling would be discussed in future, but not now.

Duterte said China did not want to bring up the arbitral ruling at a time when other claimant countries, like Vietnam, might also decide to file cases against it at the arbitration tribunal.

It was not the first time the firebrand leader has publicly discussed the content of private meetings with other world leaders.

His remarks came the same day that China and the Philippines held their first session in a two-way consultation process on the South China Sea.

They exchanged views on "the importance of appropriately handling concerns, incidents and disputes involving the South China Sea", the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement that gave few details.

(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Martin Petty)
 
Now Chelsea Clinton reacts:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/apos-rape-never-joke-apos-043537185.html

"Rape is never a joke," said Chelsea Clinton, the daughter of former US president Bill Clinton and 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, reacting to Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte's recent comments.

The foul-mouthed president, who recently declared martial law in the restive Mindanao province in the south, told military personnel in Iligan City on Friday (26 May) that they have his full backing in whatever they do to implement martial law, even if that includes raping women.

He is "a murderous thug with no regard for human rights," Clinton wrote on Twitter and said that such rape jokes can never be funny.

Several human rights campaign groups also strongly reacted to Duterte's joke and raised concerns about possible human rights abuses under martial law. The groups have previously accused the president of encouraging extrajudicial killings as part of his drug war.

Phelim Kine of Human Rights Watch told the BBC that Duterte's comment was "a sickening attempt at humour" that could encourage more human rights abuses.

"Duterte's pro-rape comments only confirm some of the worst fears of human rights activists that the Duterte government will not just turn a blind eye to possible military abuses in Mindanao, but may actively encourage them," Kine noted.

Gabriela Women's Party in the Philippines also criticised the president's rape joke, saying: "Rape is not a joke. Martial law and the heightened vulnerability to military abuse that it brings to women and children are not a joke either."


Gerifel Cerillo, coordinator of a Philippines-based women's rights group, said there was evidence of countless incidents of rape by military, paramilitary and police officers during martial law under former president Ferdinand Marcos and other presidents.

"President Duterte, in his most recent rape joke, is preaching to a monstrous choir. He encouraged a known fascist institution, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), to do exactly what it has been doing. Women, especially the poor who have been at the receiving end of such violence, are not laughing," Cerillo was quoted as saying by the Philippines Star.

However, this was not the first occasion the Filipino leader made a rape joke. In 2016, while he was campaigning for the presidential elections, the then Davao city mayor had joked about a 1989 rape and murder of an Australian missionary, saying that being the mayor of the town where the criminal act took place, he should have been "first in line".
 
Now DU30 is slamming Chelsea for her comments:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippines-duterte-slams-clinton-over-rape-criticism-110008779.html

Manila (AFP) - Philippine leader Rodrigo Duterte angrily hit back Wednesday at Chelsea Clinton for criticising remarks he made about rape, using vulgar language while referring to her father's infidelities as American president.

Duterte on Friday told soldiers they could rape up to three women, in a speech aimed at reassuring them of his full support as they enforced his newly imposed martial law on the south of the Philippines.


"Not funny. Ever," wrote the daughter of ex-US president Bill Clinton and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton on her Twitter account.

In a second post she wrote: "Duterte is a murderous thug with no regard for human rights. It's important to keep pointing that out & that rape is never a joke."

At the end of a long speech to naval officers and their families on Wednesday, Duterte said he was just being sarcastic as he took aim at people who criticised his rape remarks but particularly Clinton.

"These whores, they hear 'rape'. Like, like Chelsea, she slammed me. I was not joking, I was being sarcastic. Listen to the speech. I do not laugh at my own jokes," said Duterte, 72.

"I will tell her, when your father, the president of the United States, was screwing Lewinsky and the girls in the White House, how did you feel? Did you slam your father?"

Duterte was referring to Bill Clinton's acknowledged affair with a White House intern, Monica Lewinsky.

Duterte then accused American soldiers of raping women in the Philippines and Japan, without giving details, before returning to Clinton.

"You Americans, like Chelsea, be careful because you live in a glass house," he said, as he asked the Clinton scion what her reaction was when she first heard of the Lewinsky scandal.

Duterte, who uses profanities regularly, also attracted controversy last year when during an election campaign speech he said he had wanted to rape a "beautiful" Australian missionary who had been murdered in a Philippine prison riot.

The Australian and American ambassadors to Manila voiced their disapproval at those comments, but Duterte reacted furiously then while insisting he had been taken out of context.

Duterte also frequently launches obscenity-filled tirades against critics of his drug war, which has seen thousands of people killed and led to warnings from rights groups that he may be orchestrating a crime against humanity.

Duterte last year called then US president Barack Obama a "son of a whore" for criticising the drug war.
 
He's tired:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/isis-marawi-siege-philippines-president-122757764.html


Rodrigo Duterte, the Philippines’ strongman leader, has taken a week off while swaths of his country continue to face the horrors of an Islamic State group (ISIS) siege. Philippine forces have been battling Islamist militants in Marawi for three weeks: Civilians are starving and some have resorted to “eating blankets” to survive.

Duterte has not been seen in public since Saturday. Ernesto Abella, the presidential spokesman, told reporters Duterte was “tired” and needed to “rejuvenate.” The president missed Independence day celebrations leading some to question whether he was sick, but Abella said he was not ill.

During his presidential campaign, the 72-year-old reiterated that he did not have cancer but admitted to taking painkillers for a spinal injury.

The opposition called Duterte’s health a “national security issue.”

The Inquirer, a Philippines newspaper, says Duterte was last seen visiting wounded soldiers in Cagayan de Oro, a city near the fighting in the Mindanao region.

Duterte imposed martial law on Mindanao the day the fighting broke out. He said ISIS and affiliated Islamic groups were attempting to carve out their own territory in the province.

According to his spokesman, Duterte has made repeat visits to field camps and led strategy meetings during the insurgency.
 
Rodrigo Duterte, the Philippines’ strongman leader, has taken a week off while swaths of his country continue to face the horrors of an Islamic State group (ISIS) siege.

Strongman? More like weakman.
 
https://www.yahoo.com/news/philippines-duterte-threatens-jail-martial-law-critics-044710937.html



Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has threatened to jail critics of his use of martial law in the violence-wracked south, days before the Supreme Court is set to rule on its legality this week.

Duterte declared military rule across the region of Mindanao, home to about 20 million people, in late May to quell what he said was a fast-growing threat from the Islamic State (IS) group there.

The Philippine leader has insisted he would ignore the findings of the court, which has constitutional oversight, vowing only to listen to recommendations from the armed forces.

"It's not dependent on the whim of the Supreme Court. Should I believe them? When I see the situation is still chaotic and you ask me to lift it? I will arrest you and put you behind bars," Duterte said in a speech before local officials on Saturday.

"We can talk of anything else and make compromises maybe but not when the interest of my country is at stake."

Government forces are continuing to battle militants occupying the city of Marawi, with aerial bombardment and ferocious street-to-street combat that has left some 400 people dead and forced nearly 400,000 people in the wider area to flee their homes.

Duterte has faced a backlash from opposition lawmakers, who last month asked the Supreme Court to reject the declaration of martial law, which they have slammed as unconstitutional.

The 1987 constitution imposes limits on martial law to prevent a repeat of the abuses under dictator Ferdinand Marcos, who was deposed by a famous "People Power" revolution the previous year.

The charter allows the Supreme Court to review the factual basis for proclaiming martial law, which is limited to an initial period of 60 days. If a president decides to extend martial law, congress can review and revoke it.
 
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