• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Travel News

Travel Breaking News and Information

  • Home
  • Opinions
  • Cruise
  • Resort
  • Tours
  • Airlines
  • Destination
  • Entertainment

Donald Trump to meet ‘Trump of the East’

November 11, 2017 by www.dw.com Leave a Comment

United States President Donald Trump is scheduled to arrive in the Philippines on Sunday, November 12, but already various cause-oriented groups are delivering on their promise to host a wave of protests that would hound Trump’s visit.

On Tuesday, Bagong Alyansang Makabayan or Bayan (New Patriotic Alliance), a mostly left-wing coalition of labor and peasant groups, launched the #BanTrump campaign calling Trump’s trip “the worst aspect of US imperialism.”

On Friday, Bayan marched to the US Embassy in the Philippine capital of Manila to deliver this message but were met by riot police who formed a tight barricade in front of the embassy.

Read more:  Philippines’ Rodrigo Duterte: I will never visit ‘lousy’ US

“Donald Trump is a threat to democracy and world peace as shown in the way he has carried himself as president of the United States,” Bayan spokesperson Teddy Casino told DW. “He has the lowest trust ratings and much like the Americans, we distrust Trump. He brings with him an agenda of war and plunder to countries in Asia,” Casino added.

Protesters pushed against the police to get past the barricade but were held back by security forces in full riot gear. “I think there was restraint on both sides. There will be a series of protests throughout this week. We did not want to get off on a violent start,” Casino said.

Moral benchmark

Trump’s Philippines visit is the last leg of his whirlwind 12-day trip to various Asian countries. The US leader is attending a gala dinner in Manila on Sunday, honoring the 50th anniversary of Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).  And then he is meeting Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Monday for bilateral talks.

Human rights advocates have hoped that Trump would speak out against the human rights crises brewing in Asia, from the Rohingya crisis to Duterte’s war on drugs. In an interview earlier this week, Agnes Callamard, UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial or arbitrary executions at the UN’s High Commission on Human Rights, said Trump could set a “moral benchmark.”

“It is extremely important that President Trump – or anyone else with that kind of stature – uses their position in the global community to say and take a stand,” Callamard said.

But protesters at Friday’s rallies were not optimistic. ”We are expecting Trump and Duterte to hit it off. Their political agendas will intersect. We are not expecting anything from Trump on the war on drugs except the token mention of respect for human rights which Duterte is already doing anyway,” said Casino.

Jigs Clamor, deputy secretary general of rights group Karapatan, told DW they do not welcome Trump’s visit to the Philippines. “It is hypocrisy on the part of the US government to criticize human rights violations when it is supporting Duterte’s war on drugs that has claimed the lives of mostly poor suspected illicit drug users and pushers.”

Citing US Congress documents, Clamor said that the US government allocated $9 million (€7.7 million) for the Philippines “to support police training and infrastructure development.” The money is now being used to fund the Duterte administration’s brutally violent war against drugs, he noted, adding: Next year, the US is allocating $111 million as military assistance to the country, with $7 million of that to be used for the country’s anti-drug campaign.

Cut from the same political tapestry

The US and the Philippines have a shared but not always happy history. The Philippines was a US colony from 1898 to 1946, and the two countries have been close allies for decades.

More than 3 million Filipinos live in the United States, representing the second-largest Asian ethnic group in the country. A 1951 mutual defense treaty binds the countries to protect each other if attacked, and the United States is the Philippines’ biggest supplier of military hardware and arms.

The longstanding relationship of the two countries was put to the test when Duterte assumed the Philippine presidency in 2016 and launched a bloody war on drugs that has left more than 3,000 suspected drug pushers dead.

Smarting from Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama’s criticism of the drug war, echoing a global call to respect human rights and the rule of law, Duterte called Obama a “son of a whore.” He threatened to cut all ties to the US and forge new diplomatic friendships with China and Russia.

That may change now with President Trump seen as cut from the same political tapestry as Duterte, who has been labelled as “Trump of the East.” 

Broken promises

At another protest on Friday at Mendiola peace arch, a traditional staging ground for demonstrations, about a hundred people from urban poor communities and student groups resisted an alliance between Trump and Duterte, citing the Philippine president’s tendency to backpedal on his pronouncements and his promises.

“He said he would kick the Americans out of the Philippines. Why is Trump now coming here? Are we just being taken for a ride?” asked Estrelia Bagatbat, vice chairperson of Kadamay, a group representing the urban poor.

Among the protesters were informal settlers whose homes were demolished about three weeks ago. Bagatbat said that the billions of pesos the Philippine government is spending over the visit of Trump and other world leaders could have been used to build homes and provide livelihoods for these people.

 

  • Jamal Khashoggi: Trump gives Saudi benefit of doubt in Khashoggi case
  • Trump, Xi to Talk Trade as Economic Titans Jockey for Edge
  • Hand-holding, hugs and kisses are the highlight of Trump and Macron’s bromance
  • Up to 10,000 police officers and SAS to guard Donald Trump on visit to UK
  • Our government is just as pernicious as Donald Trump
  • Philippines' Duterte sings love song for Trump: 'You are the light'
  • Trump believes Putin on Russia meddling, but then backs US agencies
  • ‘I made Steve Bannon’s psychological warfare tool’: meet the data war whistleblower
  • Xi Jinping signals China will champion free trade if Trump builds barriers
  • Trump, Putin and Xi: a year of tough-guy leaders and foolish brinkmanship
  • 'Make our planet great again': Macron's response to Trump is praised
  • US official reveals Atlantic drilling plan while hailing Trump’s ability to distract public
  • Macron says Trump-Rouhani talks could happen within weeks
  • Donald Trump says US is not seeking war with Iran
  • Donald Trump calls Iran attack on US drone a 'big mistake'
  • Donald Trump welcomes Japan's offer of mediation with Iran
  • Donald Trump tells Iran ‘call me’ over lifting sanctions
  • Trump’s foolish Iran policy only makes war more likely
  • Khashoggi: Trump defends Saudi Arabia as Pompeo heads to Turkey
  • Factbox: The Trump impeachment inquiry - What we've learned so far
Donald Trump to meet 'Trump of the East' have 1087 words, post on www.dw.com at November 11, 2017. This is cached page on Travel News. If you want remove this page, please contact us.

Filed Under: Asia donald trump donald trump, Donald Trump and Melania Trump, trump donald trump, Donald Trump Trump, meet donald trump, donald trump melania trump

Primary Sidebar

RSS Recent Stories

  • LOCKED IN ON GOAL
  • Strengthening disaster risk management
  • PNVF announces 23-member pool, awaits schools’ official release
  • Shell, Nickel Asia tie up to develop 1 GW of renewable energy
  • Converge told: Satisfy promises, or lose tax perks
  • Arlene Muhlach on why being part of a big show biz clan both boon and bane
  • Cesar Montano on the toughest part of playing his controversial new role
  • India bans many single-use plastics to tackle waste
  • Meta slashes hiring plans, girds for ‘fierce’ headwinds
  • The rise of the 0.5 selfie

Sponsored Links

  • UK, Denmark, and Australia Report Highest Daily Covid-19 Cases
  • The best movie scenes of 2021
  • Windows 11’s Default Command Line Catches up to Mac and Linux
  • What Is the Log4j Flaw, and How Does it Affect You?
  • Commander Keen 4: The First and Only Video Game I Loved
Copyright © 2022 Travel News. Power by Wordpress.
Home - About Us - Contact Us - Disclaimers - DMCA - Privacy Policy - Submit your story