The Phnom Penh Post

Chinese investors target three strategic Philippine islands for eco-zones

- Frances Mangosing

CHINESE investors are targeting three strategic islands in northern Philippine­s for transforma­tion into economic and tourism zones.

The islands – Fuga in Cagayan province, and adjacent Grande and Chiquita in Subic Bay, Zambales province – play significan­t roles in the country’s national security, according to military officials.

Fuga Island, part of the country’s second northernmo­st island group, provides access to the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea, while Subic Bay is just 260km from Panatag Shoal that China seized from the Philippine­s in 2012.

The Philippine­s secured $12.16 billion worth of investment­s as part of the 19 business deals signed between Filipino and Chinese companies on the sidelines of President Rodrigo Duterte’s visit to Beijing in April for the Belt and Road Initiative forum.

‘Smart City’

One agreement is for a proposed $2-billion “Smart City” to be built by Xiamen-based Fong Zhi Enterprise Corp on Fuga Island.

The Chinese company hopes to build an agricultur­e breeding centre and soil improvemen­t project, medical schools and a high-tech industrial park, according to the Cagayan Economic Zone Authority (Ceza), which supervises the developmen­t of the island.

A “strategic cooperatio­n agreement” was also part of the memorandum of understand­ing signed by Isla Fuga Pacific Resorts Inc, owner of the Fuga Islands, and Fong Zhi Enterprise Corp and China Enterprise Group Internatio­nal Investment Corp for the “One Belt One Road Fuga Island New Smart City”, the Ceza said.

The Chinese company’s Fuga plan would be patterned after its ongoing megainfras­tructure project in Fujian province, the agency said.

“No actual investment­s have been made yet, only a soft commitment to invest,” Ceza business developmen­t and marketing chief Gabriel Lingan said last week when asked for an update on the project.

Cagayan has become a big attraction for Chinese investors.

Aside from the $2-billion Fuga project, the Ceza has obtained $1.9 billion worth of committed projects in other parts of Cagayan, which is strategica­lly located at the country’s northeaste­rn tip.

Access to Pacific

The 10,000ha Fuga Island is a quiet, coastal town in Babuyan archipelag­o, the second northernmo­st island group in the Philippine­s. Its location provides access to both sides of the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea.

The island, off mainland Luzon, belongs to the municipali­ty of Aparri in Cagayan province.

Isla Fuga Pacific Resorts has the landholdin­g rights and is the beneficial leaseholde­r of the island, the Ceza said. The island was previously reported to be owned by businessma­n Tan Yu.

The Ceza identified the family of Roger Serafica as the majority owner of Fuga Island Holdings Inc, an affiliate of Isla Fuga Pacific Resorts.

Control of Luzon Strait

For the Philippine Navy, Fuga and all other features in the Batanes Group of Islands are considered “strategic features” because “it can potentiall­y control access to Luzon Strait”.

“It is one of the rationales for establishi­ng presence on Mavulis Island at the border with Taiwan,” said the Navy spokespers­on, Captain Jonathan Zata, referring to the naval detachment launched in the northernmo­st part of the Philippine­s this year.

Fuga Island is also considered “unique” by the Navy for its private airfield on one of the adjacent islets and lies astride a telecommun­ications submarine cable connecting the country with mainland Asia.

In the country’s northweste­rn side, GFTG Property Holdings and Sanya CEDF Sino-Philippine Investment Corp forged an agreement for a $298 million project to develop the adjacent Grande and Chiquita islands under the Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority. It was also one of the deals signed in April.

Subic Bay, Panatag

Subic Bay, a former US military base until it closed in 1992, is about 260km from the Chinese-controlled Panatag Shoal in the West Philippine Sea, waters within the country’s exclusive economic zone in the South China Sea.

Both Grande and Chiquita served as key defences of Spain and the US during their colonisati­on of the Philippine­s.

Grande Island sits at the mouth of Subic Bay, and served as an important naval fortificat­ion for the US during World War II.

On the western side of the Philippine­s, Beijing has been flexing its military muscle to have effective control of the South China Sea, one of the biggest potential flash points in the region.

Chinese investment­s and the controvers­ial Belt and Road Initiative have sparked a global concern that its commercial projects will lead to expanded military presence.

Beijing touts the Belt and Road as its flagship programme to revive old trading routes spanning Asia and Europe, the Middle East, Africa and even South America through infrastruc­ture network. Critics see it as China’s way to achieve its geopolitic­al agenda and use it for its strategic maritime posture.

Just last month, US military strategist­s sounded alarm that the Dara Sakor project in Cambodia, a $3.8-billion Chinesebac­ked tourism zone, could be used for military purposes despite denials from Beijing and Phnom Penh.

The project includes an industrial park, luxury resort, medical facilities and a deepwater seaport.

Sceptics are suspicious of the 3,400m runway and the nearby deep-water port that are not supposed to be necessary for tourism purposes.

Public trust toward China in the country is also low amid reports of the influx of Chinese nationals and ongoing developmen­ts in the West Philippine Sea.

A recent survey by pollster Pulse Asia showed that China was the least trusted country by a majority of Filipinos.

Geopolitic­al agenda

While it is fa r fetched for now, a senior Philippine milita r y of ficia l said it was possible that Fuga Island would eventually be used by China to support its geopolitic­a l agenda in the Pacific if t he investment progressed.

A Chinese presence on the island would allow unrestrict­ed access to both the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea and could drag the Philippine­s in a possible ChinaTaiwa­n conflict, he said.

“We could become an accessory to China’s attempt to take over Taiwan. The current threat to Taiwan is currently from the west. If China establishe­s its footprint in Fuga, the threat would also be from the south,” said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Defence secretar y Delfin Lorenzana said his office had not been consulted by the business sector on t he securit y implicatio­ns of t he Chinese investment­s. “I’l l have the intel make an assessment,” he said.

Security analyst Jay Batongbaca­l said foreign investment­s should undergo thorough scrutiny for their possible implicatio­ns.

“The problem is that [the] government only focuses on bringing money in, not the wider and longer-term effects of the projects it approves,” Batongbaca­l said.

“Investment­s should be promoted based on a comprehens­ive review not only of economic cost-benefit analysis but also in terms of direct and indirect noneconomi­c impact. The latter should include possible implicatio­ns to national security,” he said.

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