Philippines' Duterte all smiles as he meets Trump
Philippines' Duterte all smiles as he
meets Trump
Donald Trump shook hands Monday with a smiling Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, a man who boasts about personally killing people and who is waging a drug war that rights groups say involves mass murder.
Donald Trump shook hands Monday with a smiling Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, a man who boasts about personally killing people and who is waging a drug war that rights groups say involves mass murder.
The
US leader is in Manila with leaders of 18 other nations for two days of
summits, the final leg of a headline-grabbing Asian tour dominated by the North
Korean nuclear crisis.
Allegations
of Russian meddling in last year's US presidential elections have also hounded
the second half of his 12-day trip, which took him from Japan to South Korea,
China and Vietnam.
Rights
groups have called on Trump to end his Asian journey with a strong statement
against Duterte's drugs war, which has seen police and suspected vigilantes
kill thousands of people.
But
brief encounters between them in the lead-up to official talks scheduled for
late Monday morning appeared to support Duterte's confidence that Trump was not
concerned with the killings. Trump shook hands with Duterte, then the pair
chatted for about 30 seconds as the Philippine leader smiled broadly, before
the opening ceremony for the first summit on Monday morning. Trump had his back
to the cameras.
The
pair also sat next to each other at a pre-summit banquet on Sunday, during
which they smiled, chatted and clinked champagne glasses. Duterte, 72, sang a
Filipino love song in front of his audience at the banquet, saying in a
light-hearted fashion that he did so on the orders of the US president.
"I'm
sure he will not take it up," Duterte said on Sunday when asked whether he
expected Trump to raise the issue of alleged extra-judicial killings in the
drugs war.
Duterte
won elections last year after promising to eradicate illegal drugs with an
unprecedented campaign that would see up to 100,000 people killed. Since he
took office, police have reported killing 3,967 people in the crackdown.
Another 2,290 people have been murdered in drug-related
crimes, while thousands of other deaths remain unsolved, according to
government data.
Many
Filipinos back Duterte, believing he is taking necessary measures to fight
crime, but rights groups warn he may be orchestrating a crime against humanity.
Amnesty
International accuses police of shooting dead defenceless people and paying
assassins to murder addicts.
- 'I already killed someone' -
When
pressured over allegations of extra-judicial killings carried out by police,
Duterte insists he has never told them to break the law. But rights groups say
police are following Duterte's incitements to kill, including comments made
last year when he said he would be "happy to slaughter" three million
addicts.
He
has also repeatedly boasted about killing people himself, most recently on
Thursday while in Vietnam for the Asia-Pacific economic summit. "At the
age of 16, I already killed someone. A real person, a rumble, a stabbing. I was
just 16 years old. It was just over a look," Duterte said.
Former
US president Barack Obama was one of many prominent critics of Duterte's
handling of the drugs war. The Philippine leader responded last year by calling
Obama a "son of a whore". But Trump has appeared to be a fan of
Duterte, telling him in a telephone call in April that he was doing a
"great job". Duterte said on Sunday that Trump had offered him
further "words of encouragement" during a brief chat in Vietnam the
previous day on the sidelines of another regional summit.
Duterte
is hosting the world leaders because the Philippines holds the rotating chair
of the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) bloc. The
events on Monday and Tuesday in Manila are two separate ASEAN-hosted summits,
which also include China, Japan, Russia, South Korea, India, Canada, Australia
and New Zealand.
The
rising threat of the Islamic State group across Southeast Asia, and further
efforts to pressure North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un to abandon his nuclear
ambitions, were top agenda items in Manila.
"Terrorism
and violent extremism endanger the peace, stability and security of our region
because these threats know no boundaries," Duterte said in an opening
ceremony speech on Monday.
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