The Philippines has taken
delivery of two Japanese military surveillance aircraft to help it
patrol vital sea lanes in the disputed South China Sea, officials say.
Philippine
military chief General Eduardo Ano said in the capital Manila on Monday
that the new planes would be deployed over Benham Rise, waters east of
the main Philippine island of Luzon and the South China Sea.
Speaking
at a ceremony to hand over the planes, Japanese Defense Minister Kenji
Wakamiya highlighted the need for bilateral coordination to meet
existing crucial regional security challenges.
"As we are faced
with many security-related issues in the Asia-Pacific, including those
in the South China Sea, our cooperation with the Philippines for the
regional security and stability is now even more significant," Wakamiya
said.
According to Manila's Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana,
Japan will lease a total of five surplus Beechcraft TC-90 planes to the
Philippines,
Japan, which has a territorial row with China over
disputed islands in the East China Sea, has worked to strengthen ties
with other countries in a bid to contain China’s growing influence in
the region.
Beijing opposed the Philippines' lease of the planes
almost as soon as it was announced last year under Manila's
then-president Benigno Aquino.
The Philippines has squabbled with
China for years over the South China Sea, but ties have improved under
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte.
his
file photo taken on May 5, 2016 shows crew members of China's South Sea
Fleet taking part in a drill in the Xisha Islands, or the Paracel
Islands in the South China Sea. (Photo by AFP)Duterte
has reversed this stance, openly courting China for trade and aid,
while playing down the South China Sea dispute. Earlier this month
Duterte said he was open to sharing resources with Beijing in the
flashpoint waters.
Duterte has also brushed aside concerns over Chinese survey ships that had been seen near Benham Rise.
China
claims sovereignty over nearly all of the resource-rich South China
Sea. Brunei, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also
have territorial claims in the waters which are also an important trade
route.
Senior Chinese officials have accused the US and its allies of stirring up tensions in the region.
In
January, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying warned the
United States not to make any rash comments about its islands in the
South China Sea, urging the White House to mind the facts and not
interfere in the territorial dispute. She was responding to comments
made by White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer who said Washington
intended to stop Beijing’s “takeover” of the South China Sea.
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