Manila Standard - 2016 October 23 - Sunday

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VOL. XXX • NO. 253 • 5 SECTIONS 20 PAGES • P18 • SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2016 • www.thestandard.com.ph • editorial@thestandard.com.ph

DUTERTE IS RIGHT, ESTRADA INSISTS

BLOOMING BROMANCE

PUTIN

DUTERTE

By Funny Pearl A. Gajunera

D

avao City—After declaring in Beijing that he would align the Philippines with China and Russia “against the world,” President Rodrigo Duterte pressed his courtship of Moscow and said he cares little for the results of the US presidential elections and would rather bet on his favorite hero Russian President Vladimir Putin. day after Duterte told at least 200 business people in Beijing that “America has lost the Philippines.” “I’ve realigned myself in your [China] ideological flow and maybe I will also go to Russia to talk to [President Vladimir] Putin and tell him that there are three of us against the world—China, Philippines and Russia. It’s the only way,” he said. While Duterte also clarified that the “separation” only meant a separation of foreign

“I cannot gamble an answer,” Duterte said here Saturday upon returning from a historic four-day state visit to China. “Either way, it would affect [the country’s foreign relations]. It might create hostility here, antagonism there so I am better off in saying that my favorite hero is Putin,” he told reporters at the Francisco Bangong International Airport. Hours before he returned, Russian Ambassador Igor Khovaev said Moscow is ready to discuss “any area, any field of possible cooperation” in a bid to boost, adding that the two countries “deserve to know each other much, much better.” Pledging Moscow “would not interfere with the domestic affairs of a sovereign state,” Khovaev said the Philippines only needs to formulate a wish list of needed support. “Think of what kind of assistance you expect from Russia and we will be ready to sit down with you and discuss what can and should be done,” the envoy said, a

SPORTS / C4

SKY’S THE LIMIT FOR SCOTTIE

THROWBACK TO LAOS. President Rodrigo Duterte and Russian President Dmitri Medvedev exchange words at the ‘family picture’ moment during the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in Vientiane last July when they first met.

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JAPINO IN MILAN. Japanese-Filipino model Rina Fukushi works on a street in Milan in one of her many international modeling engagements.

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policy and not severance of ties, he also underscored the value of mutual respect among sovereign nations. But Duterte said there was no need to dovetail Philippine foreign policy with that of America and said “we always follow and follow. I will not follow. It was not the first time, the Philippines sought Moscow amid displeasure at the prevailing state of relations with the United States. Shortly before the end of the Vietnam war in 1975, former President Ferdinand Marcos sought to reestablish ties with the then Soviet Union, through then Executive Secretary Alejandro Melchor, and formal relations commenced in 1976. Marcos visited Moscow in 1980. Duterte admitted that he was upset with the US because he felt disrespected several times in the past and blamed the US for being the cause of the terrorism being experienced worldwide.

FORMER President Joseph “Erap” Estrada backed President Rodrigo Duterte’s decision to separate foreign policy from the United States, saying it is high time the US government be stopped from its meddling in the country’s internal affairs. But the 79-year-old Estrada, who was ousted from office in 2001, feared that Duterte’s unpopular pronouncements might have severe consequences, such as his possible removal from office similar to what he had experienced in 2001. The former leader recalled that when he was president, the US government would always try to coax him into doing what they want, like when US Defense Secretary William Cohen wrote him demanding a stop to Estrada’s “all-out war” against the Moro Islamic Liberation Front which was believed to be behind several terror attacks. “They meddled in my fight with the MILF. They stopped me,” said Estrada, who is now on his second term as mayor of Manila. “When they suddenly removed me, they neglected the MILF which continued in their bombings,” he pointed out. “Just because the US is helping us [through official aid] that does not mean they can meddle in our internal problems. We are a sovereign country. We have our own Constitution,” Estrada said. “President Duterte’s action is right. Why are they meddling?” he added, referring to the US. Asked if he supports Duterte’s move to realign the Philippines with China, Estrada replied:“Yes. Because China doesn’t meddle with us, with our independence.” Estrada said he understands where Duterte is coming from when he announced the country’s “separation” from the US. “I feel what President Duterte is feeling.” He stressed it was a difficult decision for the President, one that might expose him to political risks such as the US moving to oust him from office.“That is my fear because they did that to me,” Estrada said.

JAPINO WOWS FASHIONISTAS By Jennie Matthew TOKYO—Aged just 17 and still living with her family, Rina Fukushi has seen more of the world than most Japanese schoolgirls. She is the newest model sensation making waves in Europe and New York, wowing on the runway for the likes of Miu Miu and Marc Jacobs when not chowing down on hamburgers or playing with her little brother.

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Discovered at 14, hailed by Vogue as “ultra-cool” and “eye-catching” with her enormous eyes, thick eyebrows and bee-sting lips, she is already the veteran of seasons in Paris, Milan and New York—giving American models Gigi Hadid and Kendall Jenner a run for their money. “I always believed I could be a star from the moment I was scouted. But at the same time, I still can’t believe it’s real,” says Fukushi,

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GADGETS / D4

LOVE MOTO

delightfully friendly and giggly, yet equally self-assured for her age. She arrives early for an interview with AFP, taking time out from her packed schedule at Tokyo Fashion Week to meet at a chic cafe. A girl who loves to rummage around vintage stores whenever she is traveling, she dresses for the interview in black— mini skirt from Paris, turtleneck from Japan—and brown handbag from Milan. Turn to A2

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