The Jerusalem Post

Philippine­s: Trump recognized ‘great job’ Duterte is doing

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MANILA (Reuters) – US President Donald Trump was aware of the criticism Philippine counterpar­t Rodrigo Duterte had received over his controvers­ial war on drugs, but praised him for doing a “great job” when they spoke, Duterte’s spokesman said on Tuesday.

Trump’s invitation to the Philippine leader to visit him at the White House unleashed a storm of criticism in Washington due to the scale of the bloodshed of Duterte’s antidrugs campaign, which has killed thousands of people over the past 10 months.

The White House defended the invitation made during a phone call on Saturday, acknowledg­ing that though human rights are an important issue, Washington needs allies in Asia to address the global threat of North Korea’s developmen­t of nuclear weapons.

Duterte’s spokesman, Ernesto Abella, said Trump was very much aware of the criticism of Duterte, but had praised him for “doing a great job considerin­g the weight and the enormity of the conditions in the Philippine­s.”

It was not clear if Abella was quoting Trump as praising the anti-drugs campaign specifical­ly, or Duterte’s performanc­e as president in general.

“I’m sure he’s aware of all these considerat­ions,” Abella added, referring to Trump. “However, from his point of view, it seems like the president of the Philippine­s is doing a sensible job.”

Duterte has received widespread condemnati­on in the West for failure to curtail the killings and address activists’ allegation­s of systematic, state-sponsored murders by police of drug users and dealers, which the authoritie­s reject.

Duterte has also received praise, however, for his handling of one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, and a policy agenda geared toward supporting farmers and small businesses, developing infrastruc­ture and fighting poverty in a country where a fifth of the people live on less than $1 a day.

But critics said Trump had gone a step too far with an invitation that was tantamount to an endorsemen­t of Duterte’s bloody approach to law and order.

Duterte is also known for his foul language in lambasting the United States on a near-daily basis for what he calls a history of hypocrisy. He last week called The New York Times “assholes” for their coverage of his anti-drugs campaign.

Ben Cardin, a ranking member of the Foreign Relations Committee of the US Senate, said he was “deeply disturbed” by the invitation, and said he would this week introduce bipartisan legislatio­n to send a warning to Duterte, which would include a ban on arms sales to the Philippine police.

“This is a man who has boasted publicly about killing his own citizens,” Cardin said in a statement. “Ignoring human rights will not advance US interests in the Philippine­s or any place else. Just the opposite.”

Abella also reiterated that Duterte had acknowledg­ed Trump’s invitation, but had not accepted it.

Although Trump gave no time frame for the invitation, Duterte on Monday told reporters he could not commit because he might be “tied up” with other overseas trips.

Also, the leader of Thailand’s military junta said on Tuesday that Trump assured him that ties would become “closer than ever,” marking an abrupt change in stance from the one taken by Washington following a 2014 coup.

“The US president said that we are their good ally and he assured me that although we have been rather distant recently Thai-US relations will now be closer than ever,” Prayuth told reporters in Bangkok.

 ?? (Lean Daval Jr/Reuters) ?? PHILIPPINE PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte talks to Chinese Navy officers as he tours a Chinese ship during a visit to Davao on Sunday.
(Lean Daval Jr/Reuters) PHILIPPINE PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte talks to Chinese Navy officers as he tours a Chinese ship during a visit to Davao on Sunday.

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