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Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte during his visit to China where he said it was time to say goodbye to the United States.
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte during his visit to China where he said it was time to say goodbye to the United States. Photograph: How Hwee Young/EPA
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte during his visit to China where he said it was time to say goodbye to the United States. Photograph: How Hwee Young/EPA

Philippines president Duterte says 'time to say goodbye' to America

This article is more than 7 years old

On visit to China the leader repeats his denunciation of Barack Obama as a ‘son of a whore’

President Rodrigo Duterte met with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping Thursday, state media said, as the Philippines’ leader seeks closer ties with the Asian giant while blasting his US allies.

Duterte is in China for a four-day trip that is expected to confirm his tilt away from Washington and towards Beijing’s sphere of influence.

The two leaders were to hold official talks and sign a “series of cooperation documents”, the official Xinhua news service reported.

Duterte is hoping to take advantage of Beijing’s deep pockets to score a raft of trade and infrastructure deals.

His recent rhetoric blasting the US and President Barack Obama and promising to sideline a territorial dispute over the strategically vital South China Sea has been welcomed in Beijing.

During a speech addressing the Filipino community in Beijing Wednesday, the firebrand president said the Philippines had gained little from its long alliance with the US, its former colonial ruler.

“Your stay in my country was for your own benefit. So time to say goodbye, my friend,” he said, as if addressing the US.

He also repeated his denunciation of Obama as a “son of a whore”.

China, he said earlier, was “good”. “It has never invaded a piece of my country all these generations.”

Foreign policy under Duterte has dramatically shifted from that pursued under predecessor Benigno Aquino, who took Beijing to an international tribunal over its extensive territorial claims in the South China Sea – where it has built artificial islands capable of hosting military facilities – and won a resounding victory.

The move infuriated Beijing. But Duterte, who took office in June shortly before the tribunal ruling, has made a point of not flaunting the outcome.

He has also suspended joint US-Philippine patrols in the South China Sea, and has threatened an end to joint military exercises.

The South China Sea is of intense interest to Washington and it has repeatedly spoken out on the various territorial disputes between China and its neighbours over the strategically vital waters.

In 2012, China seized control of Scarborough Shoal, a fishing ground in the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone.

Tensions have risen between the US and China over Washington’s so-called “pivot” to the Asia-Pacific, a move that Beijing says is intended to contain it.

Duterte was scheduled to meet with Premier Li Keqiang later in the day.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Chinese ship accused of using ‘military-grade laser’ against Philippine vessel

  • US seals crucial military deal with the Philippines close to China flashpoints

  • China accused of seizing rocket debris from Philippines navy in South China Sea dispute

  • Chinese vessels use water cannon to block Philippines vessels from disputed shoal

  • South China Sea: alarm in Philippines as 200 Chinese vessels gather at disputed reef

  • US commits to aiding Philippines in South China Sea

  • Photos show Beijing’s militarisation of South China Sea in new detail

  • No radar, no lights and no loo: Filipino adventurers take slow boat to China

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