Duterte gets flak for defending self-confessed womanizer ally Alvarez

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte gesturing as he delivers his speech during the 120th anniversary ceremony of the Philippine Army at Fort Bonifacio camp in Manila on Tuesday. (AFP / TED ALJIBE)
Updated 05 April 2017
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Duterte gets flak for defending self-confessed womanizer ally Alvarez

MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte faced criticism on Wednesday for defending adultery by a powerful political ally.
Duterte had said that like himself, House of Representatives Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez — who has made public his extramarital affairs — had “many wives.”
“This is a world of hypocrisy. Who among you here does not have a mistress?” the president said in a speech aired live on television on Tuesday night, adding it was “a non-issue.”
The comments drew sharp rebukes in the conservative and mainly Catholic nation that remains the last holdout against divorce — apart from the Vatican itself.
“All of it is sexist and misogynistic to explain improper behavior simply by virtue of being male,” Senator Risa Hontiveros told AFP.
“It sends a message that undermines the many struggles and gains so far for women’s rights and gender equality.”
Alvarez, the country’s fourth-highest official, is an old friend and political ally of Duterte.
The politician made headlines in the past week when he publicly admitted having sired eight children, six of them with two women other than his wife.
Duterte, in the televised speech to government employees in Manila, admitted his comments defending Alvarez’s affairs were “a chauvinist statement.”
“But really there are so many women and you (have) so short a time in this world. My God!” he said in comments that drew laughter from the crowd.
“The thing there is that you’re able to support the children. That’s it.”

Never a Christian
Duterte said that unlike married Christian Filipinos who are allowed a single wife, Alvarez “never converted to Christianity. So he is not bound by the rules of the number of women that you can have.”
Filipino critics dispute his comments, saying that while Muslim men are allowed to marry more than once, adultery is a criminal offense.
Duterte, 72, whose first marriage was annulled and who is in a long-term relationship with another woman, has openly boasted about having mistresses and using Viagra to have sex with them.
“Who isn’t entitled to happiness? Ask these lawmakers, how many of them have two, three or four mistresses? Ask them,” Duterte said on Sunday in his first public comments on the Alvarez controversy.
Duterte’s defense of adultery smacks of a double standard, said Elizabeth Angsioco, national chairwoman of the Democratic Socialist Women of the Philippines.
“These are men in positions of power so it’s unacceptable and appalling that they just speak lightly of these things. It’s very dangerous,” Angsioco added.
Duterte was elected by a landslide last year largely on a promise to kill tens of thousands of drug dealers and other criminals.
During the election campaign, the US and Australian ambassadors criticized Duterte for saying he had wanted to rape a “beautiful” Australian missionary who was murdered in a 1989 provincial prison riot in the city where Duterte was mayor.
He reacted angrily to that criticism, saying his remarks had been misinterpreted.


Thais, Cambodians fear returning home despite border truce, fearing violence

Children play around a bunker in Surin province on December 10, 2025, during clashes along the Thai-Cambodia border. (AFP)
Updated 4 sec ago
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Thais, Cambodians fear returning home despite border truce, fearing violence

  • On the Cambodian side, 35-year-old So Choeun said she expected to give birth within days and hoped to then take her baby home, about 1 kilometer from the border

BANGKOK: At a Thai university-turned-shelter for displaced people, Kanlaya Somjettana is reluctant to go home even after a truce halted weeks of border clashes with Cambodia, fearing the violence may not be over.
She said some people forced to flee the fighting began returning home on Sunday, a day after the ceasefire was announced, but many evacuees on both sides of the border preferred waiting for an official word that it was safe.
Some cited a lack of trust that the neighboring country would respect the truce, after previous ones had been broken.
“I really hope this ceasefire will last long and we can return home,” 21-year-old homemaker Kanlaya said from the university campus in Thailand’s Surin city.

FASTFACT

Officials on both sides said the day-old ceasefire was holding on Sunday, but for most areas, there has been no all-clear notice just yet.

“But I will not go back home as long as authorities do not confirm that it is safe,” she said, adding that the evacuation center was now less crowded, although hundreds remained there.
On the Cambodian side, 35-year-old So Choeun said she expected to give birth within days and hoped to then take her baby home, about 1 kilometer from the border.
But not yet, said the woman sheltering with family under makeshift tents at a Buddhist pagoda in Banteay Meanchey province.
“Despite the ceasefire, we dare not return home yet. We are still frightened,” she said. 
“We will wait to see the situation for a few days, if it will stay calm.”
Officials on both sides said the day-old ceasefire was holding on Sunday, but for most areas, there has been no all-clear notice just yet.
The truce follows three weeks of renewed cross-border fighting that killed at least 47 people and displaced more than a million on both sides.