There has arguably never been a president
like Rodrigo Duterte, even in a country used to sometimes
outrageous political personalities. To call him undiplomatic
is putting it mildly.
He is uncouth, goes into tirades, and
breaks all the rules of statecraft, even using profanity to
criticize other world leaders, as he did in 2016, when he told
Barack Obama to “go to hell.”
He also has no compunction in telling the
world he intends to rid his country of criminals and drug
dealers by murdering them.
Elected president last year, he vowed that
the fight against drugs would be “relentless.” He has ordered
thousands of extrajudicial killings as part of his campaign.
Duterte had dealt with drug crime during
his 22 years as mayor of Davao City. There too, he has
boasted, he used death squads to kill people without bringing
them to court.
Yet he remains very popular among many
Filipinos, and even in the large Filipino diaspora in the
United States, there are those who like him. In fact U.S.
President Donald Trump, who has invited him to the White
House, has praised Duterte.
Duarte now also faces a growing insurgency
on Mindanao, one of the country’s main islands.
Though the Philippine islands are located
in southeast Asia and its people a mix of Asian backgrounds,
especially Malay, some 86 per cent of Filipinos are Catholics,
the legacy of Spain’s almost four centuries of rule over the
archipelago. They were named for King
Philip II of Spain.
As a result, its political culture
resembles that of Latin America. Indeed, until 1821 the Philippines was
administered not directly from Madrid but by the Viceroy of
New Spain, in Mexico City. That only ended when
Mexico became an independent country.
But there is also a Muslim minority
concentrated on the southern islands of Mindanao, Sulu, and
Palawan. They remained impervious to Catholic proselytization.
Mindanao, the country’s second-largest
island and home to 22 million people, one-third of the
country’s population, has been the scene of a longstanding
separatist and Islamist insurgency, led by a number of groups,
including the Moro Islamic Liberation Front and the Moro
National Liberation Front.
The Filipino Muslim (Moro) minority has had
to contend with the triple challenges of the Spanish
inquisition, American colonisation, and coercive assimilation
in modern times.
In the late 1960s the Moros rose up again
against the government, after years of settlement by
Christians from other parts of the Philippines had left
Muslims a minority on Mindanao.
Devastated by civil strife, terrorism, and
all-out armed conflict, Mindanao suffers from one of the
highest rates of poverty, illiteracy and unemployment anywhere
in the world, which has been exploited by extremist groups.
Tens of thousands have been killed over five decades of armed
conflict.
While the major Moro rebel groups have
recently engaged in peace negotiations with the Philippine
government, their breakaway factions have joined other violent
groups.
These include the Bangsamoro Islamic
Freedom Fighters, organized in 2010, Abu Sayyaf, founded in
1991, and the Maute group, also known as IS Ranao, formed in
2012.
The latter two have links to the Islamic
State, which in mid-2016 endorsed a jihad in Mindanao. The
group released a video urging militants who could not reach
Syria to go to the Philippines instead.
There are about 1,200
Islamic State group operatives in the Philippines,
Indonesian Defence Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu on June 4 told
the 16th Shangri-La Dialogue, an international
security forum, meeting in Singapore.
Ryacudu called the militants
“killing machines” and urged full-scale regional cooperation
against them.
The conference was
attended by diplomats representing the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), as well
as U.S. Secretary of Defence Jim Mattis.
Recently, large-scale battles raged in
Marawi City, which has a Muslim-majority population; some of
the men killed have been from Chechnya, Indonesia, Malaysia,
Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
Duterte on May 23 imposed martial law on
Mindanao for two months. The Islamic State is now also a
Southeast Asian problem.
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