MANILA: CANBERRA, Australia: The author of the first biography of Rodrigo Duterte says the maverick Philippine president was gravitating toward China partly because of a personal animosity toward the United States and its criticisms of his human rights record.
Jonathan Miller, Asia correspondent for Britain’s Channel 4 News, spent more than a year interviewing Duterte’s family, Cabinet members, supporters and critics to compile a biography largely in the words of Filipinos. It’s called “Duterte Harry,” a nickname Duterte earned during 22 years as the gun-toting mayor of southern Davao city. It’s also a play on the Clinton Eastward movie title “Dirty Harry.”
The British journalist said Duterte would like the Philippines to be part of new sphere that included China and Russia and abandon the old alliances including with the United States, the country’s former colonial power.
China’s greatest appeal to the 72-year-old Philippine leader for a realigned relationship was money, Miller said.
“The Chinese have actually promised a lot of investment and although Duterte in the past has not been known for his infrastructure work, there are few countries in Southeast Asia that are in more need of investment and infrastructure than the Philippines — they need rail and road transport desperately,” Miller told The Associated Press in Canberra during a book signing.
“He’s looking for a lot of Chinese money in that, but he’s also doing it to punish the US and he’s got a personal chip on his shoulder over the United States, which has criticized him for his human rights abuses,” Miller said.
“He values China because they don’t criticize his human rights stuff,” he added.
Many Filipinos are unsettled by Duterte moving away from the United States and closer to China, which aggressively contests the Philippines’ territorial claims in the South China Sea.
“The move toward China alarms a lot of Filipinos who love America more than any other country in the world,” Miller said.
Duterte’s gripes with the United States include being refused a visa, apparently because of State Department alarm at death squads that operated in Davao when he was mayor, Miller said.
The International Criminal Court is conducting a preliminary probe into extrajudicial killings during Duterte’s signature war-on-drugs policy despite the president withdrawing his country from the court’s jurisdiction. A Filipino lawyer has complained that the anti-drugs campaign could amount to crimes against humanity.
Miller suspects the slayings of suspected drug users and pushers “represents the largest loss of life in Southeast Asia since Pol Pot,” the leader of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime that killed millions in Cambodia in the late 1970s.
More than 4,000 mostly urban poor suspects have been killed by police — a staggering death toll officials blame on the suspects fighting back. Human rights watchdogs have cited much higher numbers of fatalities, which the government disputes.
Duterte denies condoning summary killings and has lashed out at critics, including former President Barack Obama, Western governments and UN human rights officials who have raised alarm over the killings.
Miller’s book notes that Duterte has publicly derided Obama, Pope Francis and the author with a favored “son of a whore” insult, while declaring his approval for President Donald Trump.
In Canberra, Miller described Duterte as an admitted liar, thin-skinned, narcissistic, vengeful, angry and deeply misogynistic.
The book cites a 1998 psychologist’s report used by Duterte’s former wife in a marriage annulment court application that described Duterte as having a narcissistic personality disorder with aggressive features.
The diagnosis was drawn from the wife’s testimony. His daughter Sara Duterte-Carpio told the author that her father had been chivalrous in not contesting the report and allowing the marriage to end in a country does not recognize divorce.
Miller approached Duterte to be interviewed for the biography. Duterte referred Miller to staff to set an appointment, but staff never did.
Duterte’s top aide summoned the US ambassador in February to discuss a global threat assessment by American intelligence agencies that mentioned the Philippine leader along with dangers facing democracy in Cambodia, Myanmar and Thailand.
The US report said “autocratic tendencies” are expected to deepen in some governments in Southeast Asia and mentioned that Duterte has suggested he could suspend the constitution, declare a “revolutionary government” and impose nationwide martial law.
Duterte’s foreign policy critics argue his administration has not done enough to defend his country’s sovereignty in the South China Sea and argue it has been far too soft on China.
The Russian navy has visited Manila three times since Duterte vowed to diversify the country’s ties away from the United States and toward China and Russia. Duterte supports Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Animosity toward US ‘drives Philippine president’
Animosity toward US ‘drives Philippine president’
- Duterte would like the Philippines to be part of new sphere that included China and Russia and abandon the old alliances
- China’s greatest appeal to the 72-year-old Philippine leader for a realigned relationship was money
Australia’s Liberals elect net zero opponent as new leader
- The Liberals have endured an agonizing existential crisis since their second consecutive defeat by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labor
SYDNEY: Australia’s opposition Liberal Party elected as leader on Friday a conservative who lobbied to drop its commitment to net zero emissions, as it seeks to counter an insurgent populist right and rebuild support after a disastrous election loss last year.
The Liberals have endured an agonizing existential crisis since their second consecutive defeat by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labor, torn between centrist factions and right-wingers skeptical of climate legislation and multiculturalism.
Angus Taylor — a former energy minister — replaced Sussan Ley, the party’s first female leader who had been in office for just nine months.
Speaking following his election, Taylor said his party faced a choice: “Change or die.”
He struck a hardline on immigration, claiming “our borders have been open to people who hate our way of life.”
And he said the party would stand against “Labor’s net zero ideology.”
Ley was ousted after a leadership challenge was called on Thursday, leading multiple members of her team to resign.
Opinion polling showing it falling behind the right-wing populist One Nation had spooked her party’s leadership.
Far-right One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has long been a fixture on the fringes of Australian politics, sparking outrage last year wearing a burqa in parliament in a stunt condemned as racist.
In an upbeat statement after she was ousted, Ley thanked her supporters and said she would quit politics.
Last month she endured a public spat with longtime coalition partners the Nationals, with whom the Liberal Party has governed Australia for much of the past century.
And in November the party dropped its commitment to net zero emissions, introduced in 2021 by former leader Scott Morrison when he was prime minister.
New leader Taylor was seen as a key proponent of the decision to drop the commitment to zero emissions.
The son of a sheep farmer, he is seen as part of the Liberal’s conservative faction.
He attracted online ridicule in 2019 when he replied to his own social media post with: “Fantastic. Great move. Well done Angus.”
‘Best qualified idiot’
“Angus Taylor has just taken on the hardest job in politics,” Zareh Ghazarian at the Monash School of Social Sciences said.
“Angus Taylor now has to demonstrate what his vision is for the party, and what approach he will take to unite the party and galvanize support from the broader community,” he said.
Former Liberal leader and prime minister Malcolm Turnbull warned the party against further drifting to the right.
“That will condemn the Liberal Party to further irrelevance,” Turnbull, a prominent centrist, told national broadcaster ABC.
“A lot of people say about Angus Taylor is he has been the best qualified idiot they’ve ever met,” he said.
“He has this hugely qualified resume but then when you look at what done in politics so far it has been disappointing.”
Australia’s next general election must be held by May 2028.
The Liberals have endured an agonizing existential crisis since their second consecutive defeat by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labor, torn between centrist factions and right-wingers skeptical of climate legislation and multiculturalism.
Angus Taylor — a former energy minister — replaced Sussan Ley, the party’s first female leader who had been in office for just nine months.
Speaking following his election, Taylor said his party faced a choice: “Change or die.”
He struck a hardline on immigration, claiming “our borders have been open to people who hate our way of life.”
And he said the party would stand against “Labor’s net zero ideology.”
Ley was ousted after a leadership challenge was called on Thursday, leading multiple members of her team to resign.
Opinion polling showing it falling behind the right-wing populist One Nation had spooked her party’s leadership.
Far-right One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has long been a fixture on the fringes of Australian politics, sparking outrage last year wearing a burqa in parliament in a stunt condemned as racist.
In an upbeat statement after she was ousted, Ley thanked her supporters and said she would quit politics.
Last month she endured a public spat with longtime coalition partners the Nationals, with whom the Liberal Party has governed Australia for much of the past century.
And in November the party dropped its commitment to net zero emissions, introduced in 2021 by former leader Scott Morrison when he was prime minister.
New leader Taylor was seen as a key proponent of the decision to drop the commitment to zero emissions.
The son of a sheep farmer, he is seen as part of the Liberal’s conservative faction.
He attracted online ridicule in 2019 when he replied to his own social media post with: “Fantastic. Great move. Well done Angus.”
‘Best qualified idiot’
“Angus Taylor has just taken on the hardest job in politics,” Zareh Ghazarian at the Monash School of Social Sciences said.
“Angus Taylor now has to demonstrate what his vision is for the party, and what approach he will take to unite the party and galvanize support from the broader community,” he said.
Former Liberal leader and prime minister Malcolm Turnbull warned the party against further drifting to the right.
“That will condemn the Liberal Party to further irrelevance,” Turnbull, a prominent centrist, told national broadcaster ABC.
“A lot of people say about Angus Taylor is he has been the best qualified idiot they’ve ever met,” he said.
“He has this hugely qualified resume but then when you look at what done in politics so far it has been disappointing.”
Australia’s next general election must be held by May 2028.
© 2026 SAUDI RESEARCH & PUBLISHING COMPANY, All Rights Reserved And subject to Terms of Use Agreement.










