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Philippines welcomes Japan security role; As G7 looks at issue
By Kyoko HASEGAWA
Tokyo (AFP) June 5, 2015


Manila cheered by reports G7 will address S. China Sea dispute
Manila (AFP) June 7, 2015 - The Philippines Sunday welcomed reports that the G7 summit would express concern about unilateral efforts to assert sovereignty claims in the disputed South China Sea.

Regional alarm is growing at moves by China aggressively to stake its claim to most of the sea, including a large-scale island-building programme.

The United States has also urged China and other nations to halt reclamation.

Philippine presidential spokesman Herminio Coloma said Manila had been seeking more global attention on the issue after President Benigno Aquino raised it on numerous overseas visits.

John Kirton, director of think-tank the G7 Research Group, has said maritime disputes between China and its neighbours would be on the agenda of the summit starting Sunday in Germany.

Japan's Yomiuri newspaper also said Saturday the summit would take up the issue.

Citing sources, the paper said a closing statement would express concern about unilateral attempts to change the status quo in the East China Sea and the South China Sea.

It said no country would be named.

The Group of Seven links the leaders of Germany, Britain, Canada, France, Italy, Japan and the United States.

Asked about the reports, Coloma said that "having talks on achieving a peaceful and orderly settlement of the issue in the... South China Sea corresponds with the position taken by our country".

He recalled that Aquino had raised his concern in a recent visit to Japan and had also brought it up at a Southeast Asian summit in April and during a tour of the European Union last year.

"The position of these many countries is that they understand the value of the freedom of aviation and the freedom of navigation and the orderly process of trade and global commerce," Coloma told reporters.

Aquino last week likened present-day China to Nazi Germany during a speech in Japan, hinting the world cannot continue to appease Beijing over its South China Sea claims.

The waters are also partially claimed by the Philippines as well as Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam.

Philippine President Benigno Aquino on Friday welcomed Japan's growing security engagement, as regional tensions with China grow, the day after signing a deal to buy 10 ships to bolster his coastguard.

Closing out a four-day visit to Japan that has highlighted the warm relationship between Manila and Tokyo, Aquino said no one need fear moves by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to beef up the role of the Japanese military.

"The Philippines follows with interest Japan's ongoing review of its security policy and legislation with a view to allowing Japan to play a more proactive role in peace and security in our region and the world," he told reporters in Tokyo.

"Countries of goodwill can only benefit if the Japanese government is... allowed to come to aid of those in need, especially in the area of collective self-defence."

Abe is seeking to loosen restrictions that have prevented Japan's well-funded and well-trained military from operating outside of a very narrowly-defined "self-defence" role.

Seoul and Beijing -- onetime victims of Japanese imperialism -- caution he is trying to remilitarise a country they say does not fully accept its guilt for World War II wrongs.

But leaders of countries in the region that suffered under Japan's yoke -- among whom Aquino is the most vocal -- reject that interpretation, and say China is a greater present-day threat to regional stability.

The Philippines is one of several littoral states that have disputes with China over ownership of parts of the South China Sea.

Beijing, which claims the body of water almost entirely, has built 2,000 acres (800 hectares) of artificial islands in the sea, including those with facilities that appear to have a military purpose.

"We are particularly gravely concerned by the land reclamation activities," Aquino said. "These activities prejudice and undermine arbitration that the Philippines has initiated to settle disputes."

On Thursday Aquino signed a 12.79 billion yen ($103 million) deal with a Japanese shipbuilder to buy a fleet of 10 patrol vessels. The money is being provided in low interest loans from Tokyo.

The ships will add muscle to the Philippines' woefully equipped coastguard, the front line in Manila's pushback against China's maritime strategy.

Earlier in the visit, Aquino had sparked fury in Beijing by comparing its programme of reclamation with that of Nazi Germany in the run up to WWII, urging the international community to put its foot down.

Asked Friday whether he was concerned about hurting Chinese feelings with such remarks, he replied: "We are just standing up for our rights. We respect everybody...We think our rights ought to be respected."

Manila's willingness to stand up to Beijing is manna to Tokyo, which has its own territorial dispute with China in the East China Sea.


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