Mr. Trump does not own the building, the website says, but he licensed his name to the developers.

Parliament members in Britain debated barring Mr. Trump from the country in January on the ground of engaging in hate speech with his call to prevent Muslims from entering the United States.

Filipinos represent the fourth-largest immigrant group in the United States, about 4.5 percent of the total immigrant population, according to the Migration Policy Institute, a nonprofit think tank based in Washington. The median income of Filipino households headed by an immigrant was $82,370 as of 2013, far above the $53,000 of United States-born households, the institute says.

Mr. Trump was probably referring to a Filipino resident of California, Ralph Kenneth Deleon, who was arrested in an F.B.I. sting operation two years ago on suspicion of providing support to terrorists. Mr. Deleon, who had converted to Islam, had agreed to travel to Afghanistan to fight alongside the Taliban and later join Al Qaeda, prosecutors said.

He was sentenced to 25 years in prison on three terrorism-related charges.

The Philippines, which has been fighting both a Maoist insurgency and a Muslim rebellion for over 50 years, has long had its own problems with domestic terrorism. Recurring peace talks have proved unsuccessful, though the level of violence has waned in recent years. Among the Muslim groups fighting the Philippine government, Abu Sayyaf, which has professed ties to the Islamic State militant group, has drawn the most attention.

Abu Sayyaf has been involved in the abduction and killing of several foreigners, among them American citizens, over the past decade.