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.
 

Roque on ‘shoot vagina’ remark: ‘Do not take the President literally, take him seriously’

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/968407...ke-the-president-literally-take-him-seriously

Malacañang has downplayed the outrage against President Rodrigo Duterte’s “shoot in the vagina” remark against female members of the New People’s Army (NPA), noting that the public should already know by now the Chief Executive’s way of talking.

On Tuesday, Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque reminded the public: “Alam niyo po, matapos ang isang taon at kalahati, dapat kakilala na natin ang Presidente. Paulit-ulit kong sinasabi, do not take the President literally but take him seriously.”
(You know, after a year and a half, we should already be familiar with the President. I am saying this over and over again, do not take the President literally but take him seriously.)

“Ang mensahe po ng Presidente dahil wala na nga pong pagkakataon na magkaroon ng peace talks dahil puro katraydoran naman ang pinakita ng mga CPP [Communist Party of the Philippines]-NPA, eh asahan niyo po na tayo po ay papasok sa digmaan muli sa NPA, at tayo po ay magwawagi,” Roque also said in a press briefing in Tabuk City, Kalinga. (The President’s message is since there is no longer a chance for the peace talks because the CPP-NPA just show betrayal, expect that we will return to war against the NPA, and we will win.)

Speaking in front of more than 200 former rebels in Malacañang, Duterte said: “‘Naay babae? Unsa man, nakagunit og armas?’ ‘Sir, fighter gyud. Amazona.’ ‘Pusila sa bisong arong di na …’ (‘Are there any women holding guns?’ ‘Sir, she’s a fighter. An amazon.’ ‘Shoot her in the vagina’),” Duterte said, drawing laughter from the audience.

Women’s group Gabriela condemned the “nasty” remarks, saying that he “openly encourages violence against women.”

“Duterte’s latest nasty remark openly encourages violence against women, contributes to the impunity on such, and further confirms himself as the most dangerous macho-fascist in the government right now,” Gabriela Women’s Party Rep. Emmi De Jesus said.

“He has further presented himself as the epitome of misogyny and fascism terribly rolled in one,” she added.

Roque said that if Duterte disrespects women, the Chief Executive should have not had ordered the ban in deployment of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to Kuwait.

“Dahil kung ang Presidente po ay labag sa kapakanan ng mga kababaihan ay hindi po niya dapat ipinag-uutos yung pagtigil ng deployment ng ating mga kababayan sa Kuwait, dahil ang mga nabibiktima po sa Kuwait, karamihan po ay mga kababaihan natin,” Roque explained. (Because if the President violates the rights of women, he should not have had ordered the ban in the deployment of our people to Kuwait, because most of those abused in that country are our women.)

Roque said that the totl deployment ban to Kuwait only proved that Duterte promotes the interest not just of the Filipinos, but the women.

“’Yung kanyang order po na itigil na yan maski tayo mawawalan ng kita, ayan po ay isang paghihiwatig at pruweba na inuuna ng ating presidente na interes ay hindi lang ang mga Pilipino, kundi lalo na ang mga kababaihan, hindi dapat binabastos, hindi dapat inaapi, dapat po ginagalang,” he said.(His order, even though we will lose profits from it, it is a proof that the President prioritizes interest not just of the Filipinos but also of the women, who should not be abused and disrespected, but should be honored.)
 
Roque on ‘shoot vagina’ remark: ‘Do not take the President literally, take him seriously’

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/968407...ke-the-president-literally-take-him-seriously

Malacañang has downplayed the outrage against President Rodrigo Duterte’s “shoot in the vagina” remark against female members of the New People’s Army (NPA), noting that the public should already know by now the Chief Executive’s way of talking.

On Tuesday, Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque reminded the public: “Alam niyo po, matapos ang isang taon at kalahati, dapat kakilala na natin ang Presidente. Paulit-ulit kong sinasabi, do not take the President literally but take him seriously.”
(You know, after a year and a half, we should already be familiar with the President. I am saying this over and over again, do not take the President literally but take him seriously.)

“Ang mensahe po ng Presidente dahil wala na nga pong pagkakataon na magkaroon ng peace talks dahil puro katraydoran naman ang pinakita ng mga CPP [Communist Party of the Philippines]-NPA, eh asahan niyo po na tayo po ay papasok sa digmaan muli sa NPA, at tayo po ay magwawagi,” Roque also said in a press briefing in Tabuk City, Kalinga. (The President’s message is since there is no longer a chance for the peace talks because the CPP-NPA just show betrayal, expect that we will return to war against the NPA, and we will win.)

Speaking in front of more than 200 former rebels in Malacañang, Duterte said: “‘Naay babae? Unsa man, nakagunit og armas?’ ‘Sir, fighter gyud. Amazona.’ ‘Pusila sa bisong arong di na …’ (‘Are there any women holding guns?’ ‘Sir, she’s a fighter. An amazon.’ ‘Shoot her in the vagina’),” Duterte said, drawing laughter from the audience.

Women’s group Gabriela condemned the “nasty” remarks, saying that he “openly encourages violence against women.”

“Duterte’s latest nasty remark openly encourages violence against women, contributes to the impunity on such, and further confirms himself as the most dangerous macho-fascist in the government right now,” Gabriela Women’s Party Rep. Emmi De Jesus said.

“He has further presented himself as the epitome of misogyny and fascism terribly rolled in one,” she added.

Roque said that if Duterte disrespects women, the Chief Executive should have not had ordered the ban in deployment of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to Kuwait.

“Dahil kung ang Presidente po ay labag sa kapakanan ng mga kababaihan ay hindi po niya dapat ipinag-uutos yung pagtigil ng deployment ng ating mga kababayan sa Kuwait, dahil ang mga nabibiktima po sa Kuwait, karamihan po ay mga kababaihan natin,” Roque explained. (Because if the President violates the rights of women, he should not have had ordered the ban in the deployment of our people to Kuwait, because most of those abused in that country are our women.)

Roque said that the totl deployment ban to Kuwait only proved that Duterte promotes the interest not just of the Filipinos, but the women.

“’Yung kanyang order po na itigil na yan maski tayo mawawalan ng kita, ayan po ay isang paghihiwatig at pruweba na inuuna ng ating presidente na interes ay hindi lang ang mga Pilipino, kundi lalo na ang mga kababaihan, hindi dapat binabastos, hindi dapat inaapi, dapat po ginagalang,” he said.(His order, even though we will lose profits from it, it is a proof that the President prioritizes interest not just of the Filipinos but also of the women, who should not be abused and disrespected, but should be honored.)
so i guess he's in the right here? or am i just retarded
 
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State-subsidized physical removal of communists via individuals in the private sector. Next he should offer similar bounty for the ISIS and MILF rebels in Moro
 
https://www.forbes.com/sites/outofa...-the-philippines-could-become-his-legacy/amp/

Duterte's Ambitious 'Build, Build, Build' Project To Transform The Philippines Could Become His Legacy


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Under Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, the Southeast Asian country is experiencing an infrastructure boom unseen since the time of strongman Ferdinand Marcos.

Over the next decade, the government is set to embark on an ambitious $180 billion infrastructure spending bonanza, set to transform the Philippines’ economy.

Philippine Department of Finance (DOF) chief economist Karl Chua said in an interview that the government is looking at 75 flagship projects, which include six airports, nine railways, three bus rapid transits, 32 roads and bridges, and four seaports that will help bring down the costs of production, improve rural incomes, encourage countryside investments, make the movement of goods and people more efficient, and create more jobs.

The government is also aiming to construct four energy facilities that will ensure stable power supply at lower prices; ten water resource projects as well as irrigation systems that will raise agricultural output; five flood control facilities that will help protect vulnerable communities as well as boost their resilience against the impact of climate change; and three redevelopment programs that will deliver sustainable solutions to best meet the needs of urban population.

If successful, Duterte could once and for all extinguish the Southeast Asian country’s reputation as the “sick man of Asia”–and usher in an unprecedented era of inclusive economic development.

Striking while the iron is hot

To be fair, recent years have seen consistently high economic growth in the country. Since 2011, the Philippines has broken out of its historically mediocre growth pattern to feature among fastest growing nations in the region.

The World Bank expects the Philippine Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to grow by 6.7% in 2018 and 2019, the highest in Southeast Asia. The Duterte administration, however, is hoping to nudge growth to the 7-8% territory.

But the country’s growth has been shallow and far from comprehensive, leaving high levels of unemployment, poverty and hunger relatively untouched. And this is where the Dutertenomics’ “build, build, build” agenda comes into the picture, hoping to (literally) bridge the gap in economic policies of past administrations.Infrastructure is clearly the country’s Achilles heel.

Poor infrastructure holding Pinoys back

On one hand, infrastructure has been a major source of concern for foreign investors, who have been discouraged by the country’s weak infrastructure and heavy utility costs. Those investments are crucial to create well-paying jobs for the millions of poor and unemployed Filipinos.

According to an authoritative study by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), traffic congestion in Manila, caused by poor infrastructure, carried a daily price tag of P2.4 billion ($45 million) in 2012–a figure that is expected to almost triple by 2030.

According to the 2017 World Economic Forum’s competitiveness report, the Philippines ranked 97th in the world in terms of infrastructure. In a separate report by the United Nations, the Philippines ranked 5th in Southeast Asia in terms of access to physical infrastructure.

Duterte’s two immediate predecessors, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and Benigno Aquino III, oversaw a decade of sustained macroeconomic reform, anchored by fiscal tightening, moderate inflation, expanding trade surplus and steady economic growth.

Yet, the cost of their disciplinary economic policies was lack of sufficient investment in basic infrastructure. Under the Aquino administration, in particular, under-spending was a major concern.

Both the Arroyo and Aquino administrations were also overly dependent on private-public-partnership (PPP) schemes with local conglomerates, which lacked proper competencies.

Duterte, however, can now build on his predecessors’ legacy by diverting the Philippines’ expanding fiscal pie to address infrastructure woes. Leveraging his skyrocketing approval ratings (80%), combined with a new foreign policy direction as well as a super-majority coalition in the legislature, his administration is marshaling necessary funds to finance and sustain its ambitious economic plan.

Who’s footing the bill?

Unlike his predecessors, he is ditching the PPP modality in favor of larger reliance on government revenues as well as Official Development Assistance (ODA), particularly from Japan and China, as his main sources of infrastructure funding.

To support the new modality, Duterte has normalized relations with China, which has offered $7.3 billion in infrastructure investments, and Japan, which has been a leading investor in the Philippines for decades.

Duterte also passed a new tax reform package, which is expected to raise sufficient revenues to fund infrastructure spending. According to Mr. Chua, up to 70% of newly-raised revenues (estimated to raise P786 billion over the next 5 years) are earmarked for supporting the “build, build, build” campaign.

Communications Secretary Martin Andanar said that the government hopes the tax reform will “not only solve our present infrastructure gaps, but also support the country’s future growth.”

Nonetheless, Duterte’s ambitious infrastructure vision could be hobbled by chronic challenges. Experts have expressed doubts over absorption capacity of government agencies to undertake projects competently and on time; risk of large-scale corruption and bidding anomalies affecting foreign, especially Chinese-led, projects; lack of construction workers and skilled labor; as well as growing pressure on Philippine peso and international reserves due to need for importing intermediate goods and technology for infrastructure boom.

Supporters, however, claim that even if the government fails to achieve half of its ambitious goals, Duterte could still go down in history as a harbinger of a golden age of infrastructure buildup in the country. Infrastructure could very well be one of the Filipino president’s defining legacies.
 
https://www.cnn.com/2018/03/02/asia/duterte-philippines-un-probe-intl/index.html

Duterte tells rights investigators 'don't f*** with me' in speech

(CNN)Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte ordered police officers in his country not to cooperate with United Nations human rights investigators and offered a crass warning to those conducting the probe.

"You're investigating us? Fact finding? Sorry, do not f*** with me," Duterte said Thursday, at an event before police officers and members of the military in his hometown of Davao City.
"Who are you to interfere in the way I would run my country? You know very well that we are being swallowed by drugs."

Duterte has long voiced opposition to international criticism to his so-called war on drugs, which has killed thousands in the less than two years since he took office. Last month, the International Criminal Court announced it was beginning a preliminary inquiry into the anti-drug campaign. The 72-year-old has a history of using foul and colorful language in public -- he's called former US President Barack Obama a "son of a bitch" and, in an off-the-cuff remark, said soldiers should shoot female communist rebels in the vagina.

In his speech Thursday, Duterte warned soldiers and police officers in the audience of the possibility that their statements could be twisted and misconstrued for nefarious purposes.

"Once those human rights investigators or rapporteurs come, my order to you is: Do not answer. Do not bother," Duterte said during a speech Thursday, according to a translation from CNN Philippines.
Duterte, previously mayor of Davao City, was elected after campaigning to aggressively combat drug users and dealers by any means necessary. Last year, the Philippines Dangerous Drugs Board estimated that the country had 1.8 million drug users, many of whom were methamphetamine users.
But the bloody nature of the crackdown has drawn the ire of advocates and international human rights authorities.
Human Rights Watch estimates 12,000 people have been killed in the drug war since Duterte's inauguration in June 2016. Last year, Amnesty International said the alleged extrajudicial killings by police "may constitute crimes against humanity."
The Philippines government puts the figure much lower, estimating around 3,900 people have been killed in the drug war.
Duterte contends the issue is a domestic law enforcement matter and argues that international interference would constitute a violation of the Philippines' sovereignty.

Presidential spokesman Harry Roque told reporters Tuesday that he'd recommend Duterte allow a special rapporteur to enter the country, but he said under no circumstances would it be the UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Agnes Callamard.
Callamard has in the past condemned Duterte's drug crackdown.
 
https://mobile.reuters.com/article/amp/idUSKBN1H40XK

Philippines' Duterte now targets fake drugs


(Reuters) - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has opened a new front in his war on drugs, targeting fake over-the-counter medicines to try to stem the spread of counterfeit paracetamol, his lawyer said on Wednesday.

Salvador Panelo, chief presidential legal counsel, said Duterte had ordered police to arrest those responsible.

"They do not only undermine or weaken the national economy by hitting a large-scale industry, they also threaten national security by endangering the health of a vast majority of the people," Panelo said in a statement.

An estimated one in 10 medical products in low- and middle-income countries is substandard or falsified, the World Health Organization said in January. It said the fake drugs business accounts for about 10 percent of the annual $300 billion global industry.

Panelo said poor-quality drugs could also contribute to antibiotic resistance, threatening to undermine life-saving medicines in future.

More than 4,000 Filipinos have been killed by police during Duterte’s war on illegal drug use and thousands more by unidentified armed men. Police say those killed were all dealers who put up violent resistance.
 
http://www.sunstar.com.ph/article/1...aunch-Filipino-exploration-of-Philippine-rise

Duterte to launch Filipino exploration of Philippine Rise
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3 hours ago
PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte will lead on Tuesday, May 15, the send-off ceremonies for 50 filipino scientists who will explore the 13-million-hectare Philippine Rise.

The marine research by a group of Filipino scientists follows China's controversial expedition to the vast continental shelf east of Luzon that is part of the Philippine territory.

The Duterte administration came under fire after allowing China in January to conduct a maritime scientific research in the Philippine Rise.

China's exploration in the Philippine-claimed undersea region raised alarm among Duterte's critics, given that Beijing has competing claims with the Philippines over the disputed South China Sea, which the Philippines calls the West Philippine Sea.

The Philippine government had attempted to appease critics by saying that China was not the only country granted permission to conduct research in the Philippine Rise. Others were Japan Korea, and the United States.

China, however, gave Chinese names to five undersea features of the Philippine Rise in February, sparking a fresh round of criticisms against the Duterte administration and eliciting a protest from the government.

The controversy had prompted Duterte to restrict foreign research expeditions by allowing them, only if they get permits from the Foreign department's inter-agency technical working group and the office of National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr.

The President in February likewise assured that the Philippines would assert "exclusive ownership" over the Philippine Rise.

In 2012, the United Nations declared the Philippine Rise as an extension of the Philippines' continental shelf.

The region is potentially rich in oil and gas reserves that remain untapped because of the Philippines' lack of research capabilities.

In March, Duterte bared his plan to procure survey ships to allow the country to fully explore the resources that can be tapped in the vast underwater region. (SunStar Philippines)
 
Now Duterte intends to target children(no, not the way you're probably thinking, or is he?):

https://www.yahoo.com/news/duterte-targets-philippine-children-bid-widen-drug-war-132029560.html

By Clare Baldwin and Andrew R.C. Marshall

MANILA (Reuters) - Before Rodrigo Duterte's bloody war on drugs had even begun, allies of the Philippines president were quietly preparing for a wider offensive. On June 30, as Duterte was sworn in, they introduced a bill into the Philippine Congress that could allow children as young as nine to be targeted in a crackdown that has since claimed more than 7,600 lives.

The bill proposes to lower the minimum age of criminal responsibility from 15 to 9 years old to prevent what it calls "the pampering of youthful offenders who commit crimes knowing they can get away with it."

"You can ask any policeman or anyone connected with the law enforcement: We produce a generation of criminals," Duterte said in a speech in Manila on December 12. Young children, he said, were becoming drug runners, thieves and rapists, and must be "taught to understand responsibility."

The move to target children signals Duterte's determination to intensify his drug war, which faces outrage abroad and growing unease at home. The president's allies say his support in Congress will ensure the bill passes the House of Representatives by June.

The House would approve the bill "within six months," said Fredenil Castro, who co-authored the legislation with the speaker of the House, Pantaleon Alvarez. It might face opposition in the Senate, but would prevail because of Duterte's allies there, added Castro.

National police chief Ronald Dela Rosa recently announced that he was suspending anti-narcotics operations, which have killed more than 2,500 people, while the force rids itself of corrupt cops. The announcement came after it emerged last month that drug squad officers had killed a South Korean businessman at national police headquarters.


The killing of drug suspects has continued, albeit at a slower pace, with most following the pattern of killings that police have blamed on vigilantes. Human rights monitors believe vigilantes have killed several thousand people and operate in league with the police – a charge the police deny.

Duterte has signaled he intends to continue his drug war. In late January, he said the campaign would run until his presidency ends in 2022.

'IN CAHOOTS WITH DRUG USERS'

Lowering the age of criminality was justified, Castro told Reuters, because many children were "in cahoots with drug users, with drug pushers, and others who are related to the drug trade." He said he based his support for the bill on what he saw from his car and at churches – children begging and pickpocketing. "For me, there isn't any evidence more convincing than what I see in every day of my life," he said.

A controversial bill to restore the death penalty, another presidential priority, is also expected to pass the House of Representatives by mid-year, according to Duterte allies in Congress.

Supporters of the bill to lower the age of criminality say holding young children liable will discourage drug traffickers from exploiting them. Opponents, including opposition lawmakers and human rights groups, are appalled at a move they say will harm children without evidence it will reduce crime.

There is also resistance inside Duterte's administration. A member of Duterte's cabinet who heads the Department of Social Welfare and Development opposes the move. And a branch of the police responsible for protecting women and children disputes the claim that children are heavily involved in the drug trade – a claim not supported by official data.

Opponents warn that lowering the age of criminality would further strain a juvenile justice system that is struggling to cope. At worst, they say, with a drug war raging nationwide, the bill could legitimize the killing of minors.

"What will stop them from targeting children?" said Karina Teh, a local politician and child rights advocate in Manila. "They are using the war on drugs to criminalize children."

IN THE FIRING LINE

The drug-war death toll includes at least 29 minors who were either shot by unidentified gunmen or accidentally killed during police operations from July to November 2016, according to the Children's Legal Rights and Development Center (CLRDC) and the Network Against Killings in the Philippines, both Manila-based advocacy groups.

Dela Rosa said the Philippine National Police "fully supports" the new bill. It is "true and supported by data" that minors are used by drug traffickers because they can't be held criminally liable, the police chief said in a submission to the House of Representatives.

Some police officers working on the streets agree with Dela Rosa. In Manila's slums, children as young as six act as lookouts for dealers, shouting "The enemy is coming!" when police approach, said Cecilio Tomas, an anti-narcotics officer in the city. By their early teens, some become delivery boys and then dealers and users, said Tomas.

Salvador Panelo, Duterte's chief legal counsel, said the bill would protect children by stopping criminals from recruiting them. "They will not become targets simply because they will no longer be involved," he said.

Child rights experts say the legislation could put children in the firing line. They point to the deadly precedent set in the southern city of Davao, where Duterte pioneered his hard-line tactics as mayor. The Coalition Against Summary Execution, a Davao-based rights watchdog, documented 1,424 vigilante-style killings in the city between 1998 and 2015. Of those victims, 132 were 17 or younger.

For all but three years during that period, Duterte was either Davao's mayor or vice-mayor. He denied any involvement in the killings.

CONTRADICTORY EVIDENCE

Althea Barbon was one of the children killed in the current nationwide drug war. The four year old was fatally wounded in August when police in an anti-narcotics operation shot at her father, the two Manila-based advocacy groups said. Unidentified gunmen shot dead Ericka Fernandez, 17, in a Manila alley on October 26, police said. Her bloody Barbie doll was collected as evidence. And on December 28, three boys, aged 15 or 16, were killed in Manila by what police said were motorbike-riding gunmen.

If the bill passes, the Philippines won't be the only country where the age of criminality is low. In countries including England, Northern Ireland and Switzerland it is 10, according to the website of the Child Rights International Network, a research and advocacy group. In Scotland, children as young as eight can be held criminally responsible, but the government is in the process of raising the age limit to 12.

Critics of the Philippines' bill say lower age limits are largely found in countries where the legal systems, detention facilities and rehabilitation programs are more developed.

Statistics from the police and the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA), the government's top anti-narcotics body, appear to contradict the Duterte camp's claim that there is a large number of young children deeply involved in the drug trade.

There were 24,000 minors among the 800,000 drug users and dealers who had registered with the authorities by November 30, according to police statistics. But less than two percent of those minors, or about 400 children, were delivering or selling drugs. Only 12 percent, or 2,815, were aged 15 or younger. Most of the 24,000 minors were listed as drug users.

The number of minors involved in the drug trade is "just a small portion," said Noel Sandoval, deputy head of the Women and Children's Protection Center (WCPC), the police department that compiled the data.

The WCPC is not pushing to lower the minimum age of criminal responsibility, said Sandoval, but if the age is to be lowered, his department recommends a minimum age of 12, not 9.

Between January 2011 and July 2016, 956 children aged six to 17 were "rescued nationwide from illegal drug activity," according to PDEA. They were mostly involved with marijuana and crystal methamphetamine, a highly addictive drug also known as shabu, and were handed over to the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD). Of these, only 80 were under the age of 15.

MORE DETENTIONS

Asked for evidence that younger children are involved in the drug trade, Duterte's legal counsel Panelo said the president had data from "all intelligence agencies." Panelo declined to disclose those numbers.

Among the opponents of the bill is a member of Duterte's cabinet, Judy Taguiwalo, secretary of the DSWD. The legislation runs counter to scientific knowledge about child development and would result not in lower crime rates but in more children being detained, Taguiwalo wrote in a letter to the House of Representatives in October.

Hidden by a high wall topped with metal spikes, the Valenzuela youth detention center in northern Manila is already operating at twice its capacity. Its 89 boys eat meals in shifts – the canteen can't hold them all at once – and sleep on mats that spill out of the spartan dorms and into the hallways.

The government-run center, which currently houses boys aged 13 to 17 for up to a year, is considered a model facility in the Philippines. Even so, said Lourdes Gardoce, a social worker at the Valenzuela home, "It's a big adjustment on our part if we have to cater to kids as young as nine."

(Reporting by Clare Baldwin and Andrew R.C. Marshall. Edited by David Lague and Peter Hirschberg.)
This is actually very interesting, considering the judicial issues that were in Florida that resulted in the Cruz shooting (in that they purposefully arrested less juvies in an attempt to make themselves look better, resulting in many gangs using juvies to commit crimes since they were more likely to get away from them; least, that's my understanding of it).
 
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/166967/duterte-reveals-china-wont-allow-ouster

Duterte reveals China won’t allow his ouster
By: Nestor Corrales - Reporter / @NCorralesINQ
INQUIRER.net / 07:51 PM May 15, 2018


ONBOARD BRP DAVAO DEL SUR – President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday revealed that China won’t allow him to be ousted from power.

“The assurances of [Chinese President] Xi Jinping were very encouraging. Eh nandyan iyan sila. ‘We will not allow you to be taken out from your office, and we will not allow the Philippines to go to the dogs,’” Duterte said during a send-off ceremony of Filipino scientists here at Casiguran Bay in Aurora.

“Siguro kasi dahil freely elected leader ako. It could be a very justified statement,” he added.

Despite the country’s maritime dispute at the South China Sea, Duterte has since eased the strained relations between Manila and Beijing, setting aside, for now, the United Nations arbitral ruling that invalidated China’s expansive claims in the South China Sea.
 
https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/inside-track/203132-duterte-joke-philippines-invade-other-nations

Duterte's joke to Navy: One day, Philippines will invade other nations
With an improved naval force, 'maybe we can start invading other nations,' President Rodrigo Duterte tells the Philippine Navy during its anniversary
Pia Ranada
@piaranada
Published 8:20 PM, May 22, 2018
Updated 8:20 PM, May 22, 2018

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IMPROVING NAVAL FORCE. President Rodrigo Duterte jokes that one day, the Philippine Navy will be capable of invading other countries. RTVM screenshot

A hundred years from now, it will be the Philippines invading other nations and not the other way around.

This was President Rodrigo Duterte's joke to the Philippine Navy on its 120th anniversary on Tuesday, May 22.


"I therefore ask each of you to do your part so that in the next 120 years we can establish a naval force that will last a lifetime and maybe we can start invading other nations," said Duterte in his speech for the event.

The President's quip comes after China deployed bombers to the Paracel Islands in the South China Sea, a move that puts Manila and key military bases within range of Beijing's missiles.

Duterte's administration has come under fire for its weak response to the incident, a sign that China is taking its militarization of the South China Sea to new levels, according to experts.

The Philippine Navy is closely involved in the protection of the country's sovereignty and sovereign rights in the West Philippine Sea, which China is claiming through its 9-dash line.

The Philippines, in 2016, scored an international ruling that invalidated the 9-dash line, but Duterte has chosen to downplay this ruling in favor of warmer ties with China.

Acting Chief Justice Antonio Carpio has said that not asserting the ruling "will be handing over to China on a silver platter the West Philippine Sea."

He and former foreign secretary Albert del Rosario urged the Duterte government to file a diplomatic protest against China's recent actions. – Rappler.com
 
https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/ro...es-kiss-overseas-filipina-worker-south-korea/

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The often controversial leader of the Philippines, President Rodrigo Duterte, has again drawn condemnation for his treatment of women by kissing an overseas worker from his own country -- on stage and in front of dozens of video cameras -- during a visit to South Korea. The woman involved said later there was "no malice" in the onstage kiss, but a rights group condemned the stunt as the "disgusting theatrics of a misogynist president."


During a recent visit to the South Korean capital, Duterte addressed a large gathering of citizens of his own country, including many overseas workers from the Philippines. During the event, he invited the woman onto stage and presented her with a book. In exchange, he repeatedly requested that she kiss him, pointing to his lips. She appeared shy, laughing at the request, but eventually getting close enough for him to move in and plant a kiss on her mouth.

In its online statement condemning the act Philippines women's rights group GABRIELA said it was, "unfortunate that the woman found it her obligation to publicly defend the act as "no malice," when it is the President who is duty-bound to explain not only because it was upon his prodding but he is bound, as a public official, by rules of ethics to explain his unruly conduct."


"I was angry because she was raped," he said. "That's one thing. But she was so beautiful, the mayor should have been first, what a waste," said Duterte. His office later apologized, but he said nothing himself in public.


In February this year, Human rights groups condemned Duterte for saying his troops should shoot female communist rebels in the genitals to render them "useless," which they said could encourage sexual violence and war crimes.
 
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