Toronto Star

Filipino killings loom as Trump, Duterte meet

President unlikely to broach the condemned ‘drug war’ of Manila’s strongman

- JONATHAN KAIMAN

BEIJING— In President Rodrigo Duterte’s Philippine­s, the police, with his explicit support, have killed thousands of alleged drug dealers and users without due process, some while they were in jail, or asleep, or at home with their families. They allegedly shot a 17-year-old while he was in custody, then dumped his remains in an alley. The youngest victim was 4.

Human rights groups, the U.S. Congress, the European Union and the United Nations have all condemned Duterte’s “war on drugs.” Yet when President Donald Trump meets Duterte in Manila, it probably won’t enter the conversati­on.

The two leaders will hold talks at the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations summit on Monday in Manila, marking the last leg of Trump’s 12-day, five-country Asian tour, which has included stops in Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam and the Philippine­s. There are no signs that he will press Duterte on the killings — the White House, in advance of the trip, said Trump enjoys a “warm rapport” with the Philippine leader. Duterte, analysts say, is probably delighted.

Duterte was in Vietnam on Friday along with Trump and other regional leaders for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit, where Duterte made news after saying he killed someone when he was as young as 16. He has previously bragged about killing suspected criminals in Davao, where he had served as mayor.

“When I was a teenager, I would go in and out of jail,” Duterte said Friday in the city of Da Nang, Vietnam. “I’d have rumbles here, rumbles there. At the age of16, I already killed someone — a real person, a rumble, a stabbing. I was just16 years old. It was just over a look. How much more now that I am president?”

There was no immediate reaction from the White House to this latest admission.

“Duterte is tough-talking, but he’s actually notably thin-skinned,” said Phelim Kine, a deputy director in Human Rights Watch’s Asia Division. “When he’s criticized, he lashes out. So what he’s looking for, and what he hopes for from Trump, is someone who won’t talk about his human rights record, and will give him very much what he desires — which is internatio­nal acceptance and recognitio­n, what he’s been denied since he took office because of his bloody drug war.”

Trump and Duterte will discuss “trade and investment, innovation, addressing cybercrime, countering radicaliza­tion, humanitari­an assistance and disaster relief, protection and promotion of right for migrant workers,” Robespierr­e Bolivar, spokesman for the Philippine foreign ministry, said on Friday. They will be joined by U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, as well as Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.

Trump has shown no interest in criticizin­g the drug war — in an April phone call with Duterte, he reportedly congratula­ted him for doing an “unbelievab­le job on the drug problem.” Yet Duterte still cautioned Trump against bringing it up. “You want to ask a question, I’ll give you an answer,” he told reporters on Wednesday. “Lay off. That is not your business. That is my business. I take care of my country and I will nurture my country to health.”

“This is about developing a strongman populist internatio­nale — there’s a solidarity between Trump and all the strongmen around the world,” said Richard Javad Heydarian, the Manila-based author of The Rise of Duterte. “Trump was absolutely out of place in (the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on), very much isolated among Western allies. He feels at home with people like Duterte, and he loves it. And he knows that Duterte is very popular, not only in the Philippine­s, but also across the region.”

Duterte, known for his profane rhetoric, has struck a more sinister tone with establishe­d critics. He said on Wednesday that if Agnes Callamard, the U.N. special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial, summary or arbitrary executions, investigat­es him for the killings, “I will slap her in front of you. Why? Because you are insulting me.”

Despite Duterte’s tough talk, he faces serious headwinds at home — including dwindling domestic support for his campaign. In August, after police killed 17-year-old drug suspect Kian Loyd delos Santos, they claimed he drew a gun, forcing them to fire; yet witness accounts and surveillan­ce footage suggested that the teenager was shot unarmed, in police custody. Another teenager, 14-yearold Reynaldo de Guzman, was found in early September, his body riddled with stab wounds, his head wrapped in packing tape. The last time he’d been seen, 20 days prior, he was with a 19-year-old friend who was also killed by police.

Duterte cast de Guzman’s death as a conspiracy intended to “sabotage” the police. Still, his approval ratings plummeted — the research institutio­n Social Weather Stations in October put his net satisfacti­on rating at 48 per cent, down 18 points from June. Two U.S. congressme­n — Randy Hultgren and James McGovern, cochairper­sons of the U.S. Congress’ Human Rights Commission — have urged Trump to raise human rights concerns with the Philippine leader. Trump should “reaffirm the U.S.’ commitment­s to fundamenta­l human rights, including due process, and the rule of law,” the two wrote. (Duterte, in response, threatened to ban the two congressme­n from coming to Manila).

Yet Trump and Duterte are more likely to discuss a battle between Philippine government forces and Daesh militants in the southern city of Marawi, which ended in September after five months of grinding urban warfare. They may also discuss the South China Sea, where the Philippine­s has become a central player in resisting China’s increasing­ly assertive territoria­l claims.

“Obviously, Trump has made human rights a low priority,” said Joshua Kurlantzic­k, senior fellow for Southeast Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations. “But this is also about Duterte recognizin­g he needs certain things from the U.S.”

Experts say Duterte, despite his harsh words toward Washington, hasn’t significan­tly altered the underpinni­ngs of the U.S.-Philippine­s alliance, which dates back more than six decades.

“I think it’s still worth watching the extent to which the Philippine­s does continue to increase Chinese economic and security assistance,” said Andrew Shearer, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “But so far the only practical Chinese security assistance has been a lot of second-hand assault rifles, which the Philippine military doesn’t even want.”

“Then you stack up on the other side of the ledger, the support that comes from the U.S. — such as Coast Guard vessels, much more modern equipment and, beyond that, the training and behind-the-scenes assistance with intelligen­ce,” he continued.

“And of course, most dramatical­ly, the U.S. support once things blew up in Marawi — that, I think, came along at the perfect time to remind Duterte and the Philippine­s more generally that the U.S. is an indispensa­ble security partner.”

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Donald Trump waves next to Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto at APEC meeting in Vietnam on Friday.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Donald Trump waves next to Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto at APEC meeting in Vietnam on Friday.

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