MANILA, Philippines — Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Tuesday said his family’s history with the United States (US) will not influence his foreign policy should he win as president in the elections this May.
“‘Yung hindi magandang karanasan sa US, walang kinalaman ‘yan sa foreign policy. Hindi kasama ‘yan sa magiging pag-iisip kung paano ia-approach ‘yung foreign policy,” he said in an interview over DZRH.
(Our not-so-good experience with the US will have nothing to do with foreign policy. This will not be included in the logic on how to approach foreign policy.)
He also said he will not subscribe to the old “cold war mentality” where the world is divided into “spheres of influence of superpowers.”
“We have to create our own foreign policy. Isipin natin (We’d think) what is in the national interest,” Marcos Jr. said.
In 2012, A US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit handed down a contempt judgment against Marcos Jr., his mother Imelda, and the estate of Ferdinand Marcos for violating an injunction that barred them from dissipating assets of the estate.
The contempt award meant that the Marcoses would not be allowed to set foot on any US territory.
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The judgment amounting to $353.6 million is believed to be the largest contempt award ever affirmed by an appellate court.
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Thousands of martial law victims also won a class action lawsuit for human rights violations against the estate of dictator Ferdinand Marcos in Hawaii in 1986, where they were awarded close to $2 billion.