MANILA (AFP) -
In a nation
with a famously raucous political scene, Rodrigo Duterte stands out as
one of the Philippines' most colourful, unorthodox and controversial
figures.
The longtime mayor of the southern city of Davao has
captivated Filipinos with vows of brutal but quick solutions to crime
and poverty, offering himself as a strongman capable of up-ending
politics as usual.
A lawyer and former state prosecutor who
briefly joined a communist organisation in his youth, the 71-year-old
has appalled many with foul-mouthed rants including calling the pope a
"son of a whore".
But while his outbursts dominated the headlines,
none dented his popularity -- even a joke that he wanted to rape a
"beautiful" Australian missionary who was killed in a 1989 Davao prison
riot.
His rollicking ride to the presidency in Monday's election
is testament to the appeal of an anti-establishment politician in a
nation sickened by entrenched corruption and the domination of the
economy by a few dozen elite families.
Duterte is also an
undoubtedly charismatic politician and natural story-teller, with his
street language and off-colour jokes enraging his opponents but
captivating audiences on the campaign trail in recent months.
He
has further burnished his populist credentials by always wearing jeans
and casual shirts in public, and shunning the traditional "barong" shirt
worn for formal occasions.
Duterte, a serial adulterer who admits
to having four children by four women including his estranged wife, has
always been a contentious character.
Jesuit priests expelled the
truant and under-achieving high schooler from the Ateneo de Davao
school, where he boasted he played basketball while his classmates pored
over books in the library.
Duterte, the son of a former
provincial governor, was forced onto the straight and narrow by a
disciplinarian teacher-mother who hailed from an indigenous Muslim group
in the southern Philippines.
But friends say his Catholic father,
a lawyer who migrated from the central Philippines to the rich farming
lands of the Muslim-majority south to seek better work opportunities,
was his role model.
Christian Filipinos from the northern and
central Philippines were encouraged by the government after independence
to migrate to the Mindanao region and establish homesteads, holding up
the region as a "land of promise".
As presidential rivals began
conceding defeat before dawn Tuesday, Duterte visited his parents'
mausoleum and sobbed unashamedly.
- 'Dictator in the making' -
The
young Duterte went to college in Manila, where Jose Maria Sison, the
now exiled founder of the country's deadly and long-running Communist
insurgency, became one of his teachers and inspired his flirtation with
the movement.
He studied to become a lawyer at the San Beda Law
School, and became a government prosecutor where he said he saw
first-hand the corruption that pervades all levels of Philippine
society.
He entered politics in 1986, after the fall of the dictator Ferdinand Marcos.
Ironically
he was initially appointed as caretaker vice mayor of Davao by the new
leader Corazon Aquino, mother of outgoing president and staunch Duterte
critic Benigno Aquino.
Aquino warned during the election campaign that Duterte was a dictator in the making but voters took little heed.
Duterte
has been mayor of Davao -- the third largest city in the Philippines
with a population of about two million -- for most of the past two
decades.
Like much of the rest of Mindanao, Davao was wracked by communist and Muslim insurgencies when he first came into office.
He
now has a reputation for transforming the city into one of the nation's
safest and most orderly, with smoking banned in public places and a
midnight curfew for drinking alcohol in public.
However some of his other methods have been hugely controversial.
Duterte
is accused of running death squads -- made up of police, ex-communist
rebels and hired assassins -- that rights groups say have killed more
than 1,400 people, including children.
Duterte has at times boasted of leading the death squads and at other times denied any links.
But
on the presidential campaign trail, he vowed to clean up the rest of
the country using the same tactics as in Davao, and warned security
forces would be unleashed to kill tens of thousands of criminals.
by Cecil Morella
© 2016 AFP
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