The Phnom Penh Post

Japan’s PM Abe first foreign leader to visit Duterte

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JAPANESE Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrived in the Philippine­s yesterday, becoming the first foreign leader to visit since President Rodrigo Duterte took office last year and launched his deadly war on crime.

Abe is intent on maintainin­g Japan’s strong ties with the Philippine­s as Duterte shakes up his nation’s foreign policy with a shift away from the United States, both nations’ longtime ally, in favour of China and Russia.

After his two-day stay in the Philippine­s, Abe will head to Australia, Indonesia and Vietnam with a business delegation as he looks to the region to boost Japan’s economy dragged down by a greying and shrinking population.

“I would like to exchange views on bilateral and regional issues and hold frank talks on how we should contribute to the peace and stability of the region,” Abe said before departing for Manila.

While Duterte has pivoted away from the United States, he has gone out of his way to maintain close relations with Japan – the Philippine­s’ largest donor and top trading partner.

“Japan has really been our biggest helper,” Duterte said on a visit to Tokyo last October when he met Abe.

His warm words for Japan have been helped by Abe and his government offering no criticism of the Philippine crime war, which has claimed about 6,000 lives since Duterte assumed the presidency in the middle of last year.

Duterte has repeatedly railed against US President Barack Obama and his administra­tion for alleging widespread human rights abuses in the crime war.

Duterte has travelled overseas extensivel­y as president. However Abe is the first head of government to visit the Philippine­s since Duterte took office.

Abe and Duterte were scheduled to meet in the presidenti­al palace yesterday afternoon, the Philippine foreign affairs department said.

Abe will also visit Duterte’s home town of Davao in the southern region of Mindanao, where Japan has supported the peace process with Muslim rebels through developmen­t and poverty eradicatio­n programmes.

Japan was the Philippine­s’ top trading partner in 2015, with $18 billion in trade, according to official figures.

With a severely under-equipped military and coast guard, the Philippine­s has also looked to Japan to boost maritime security as the two nations face separate sea disputes with China.

Japan and China are locked in a longrunnin­g row over uninhabite­d islets in the East China Sea, while Manila and Beijing have overlappin­g claims in the South China Sea.

Japan last year gave the Philippine­s two large patrol vessels and said it would lease training aircraft, on top of 10 coast guard ships that Tokyo pledged to Duterte’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino.

However unlike Aquino, Duterte has played down the maritime dispute with China while focusing on economic concession­s and help in his drug war.

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