Japan Prime Minister To Duterte: Ignore Frogs and Focus on your citizens
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DAVAO – With a visit to Philipine President Rodrigo Duterte’s
bedroom, having one of the world’s rarest birds named in his honor and
guided by a sockless host, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had a
morning to remember on Friday.
Duterte, a charismatic politician known at home for his folksy charm,
dropped many of the formal protocols normally associated with visits by
a head of government as he took Abe on a tour of his beloved southern
home city of Davao.
Abe’s day began with a visit to Duterte’s “simple home” for a
breakfast of sticky rice cakes and mung bean soup, a presidential aide
said, with the leaders dining at a wooden table before heading for a
look around Duterte’s house.
“We also showed him how the president enjoys the comfort of his own
bed, including his old and favorite mosquito net,” Duterte’s aide,
Christopher Go, wrote on Facebook alongside a photo of the leaders
smiling while standing next to the bed.
Akie
Abe, wife of Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, receives a Filipiniana
blouse from Philippines’ President Rodrigo Duterte during their visit to
the President’s residence at Dona Luisa Village in Davao City. Reuters
The leaders later had a casual meeting at a hotel overlooking the
sea, where Duterte was photographed in a checkered shirt and long pants
but no socks — a familiar look for the 71-year-old who takes pride in
his informal fashion style.
Abe’s next activity saw him standing in front of a stuffed Philippine
eagle, the national bird and one of the world’s most endangered.
A ceremony saw a two-year-old eagle named Sakura after the famous Japanese cherry blossom.
Abe was given a photo of the eagle, which is kept at a nearby
sanctuary, as well as a fluffy toy version draped in indigenous
clothing.
President Rodrigo Duterte hands over a framed photograph of a
Philippine Eagle to Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during the
ceremonial eagle naming at the garden area of Waterfront Insular Hotel.
Reuters President
Rodrigo Duterte hands over a framed photograph of a Philippine Eagle to
Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during the ceremonial eagle naming at
the garden area of Waterfront Insular Hotel. Reuters
Abe, normally blue-suited and politically conservative who
nevertheless showed off his fun side last year when he dressed up as
video game icon Super Mario at the Rio Olympics’ closing ceremony,
appeared to enjoy the day.
He smiled and laughed throughout the eagle ceremony, and ended his
Davao trip at a Japanese-language school where he was greeted by singing
and flag-waving children.
Abe was the first foreign leader to visit the Philippines since Duterte took office just over six months ago.
His two-day trip began on Thursday with a much more formal itinerary
in the capital of Manila, where he held meetings with Duterte at the
presidential palace. President
Rodrigo Duterte and Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe try durian fruit
after attending various events at the Waterfront Hotel in Davao City.
Reuters
Abe was also the first head of government to visit Davao, the largest
city in the southern Philippines that is 1,500 kilometers (900 miles)
from Manila.
Duterte, a longtime mayor of Davao before becoming president, has
made developing the southern Philippines a top priority, arguing the
region has been neglected by “imperial Manila”.
Abe flew from Davao to Australia on Friday afternoon as part of a trip that will include Indonesia and Vietnam.
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