Self-inflicted wounds

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Thu, 03 Oct 2019 16:30:37 +0000

 

echf ecf JOHNNY DAYANG echoes

THROUGHOUT its entire exis­tence, the Duterte administra­tion has mastered, consciously or otherwise, the art of self-infliction, hurting itself when there was no need really to embrace policies that destabilize the status quo.

The first self-inflicted wound was when the President declared a change of foreign policy, bragging the country would veer towards China and Russia because the US has treated the Philippines, a long-time ally, has never been given its due in terms of support and assistance.

For all the good intentions the new policy carries, the Philippines has only been getting the short end of all the deals we have with China and insulted for our win in the UN arbitral court.

Because we have bowed to China’s overtures, the Beijing demigods created islands inside our contested zones and sent mi­litia crafts camouflaging as fishing ships in Philippine territory to bully Filipino fishers, harass the Coast Guard, and stop military supply vessels. Even when Filipino trust on the Chinese hit bottom, the President was unchanging in its worship of Beijing.

Perhaps the deepest wound it has self-inflicted is the denial that human rights violations do not ex­ist in the archipelago. By so doing, the Duterte regime has discredited reports gathered from diverse but reliable sources using government files and public statements.

Adding injury to self-inflicted wounds was the statement that the government would stop receiving aids, grants, and loans from coun­tries that supported the draft UN resolution of Iceland, which con­demned human rights violations in the islands. The government, by doing this absurd retort, only exposes its lack of resolve to con­front and address global percep­tions, accurate or not, that have long-term implications in the way we pursue our foreign policies.

Verily, it is not a sin to criticize the claims other nations have slapped on us. But, it is a misste
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