The Borneo Post

7.6 pct increase in defence spending lowest in 6 years

- March 6, 2016

BEIJING: China will raise its defence spending by 7.6 per cent this year, a budget report to the country’s Communistc­ontrolled parliament showed yesterday, a smaller increase than past years as it seeks a more efficient military.

It was the “lowest defence budget increase in six years”, the official news agency Xinhua said, adding it came “in the wake of rising economic headwinds and last year’s massive drawdown of service people”.

The comment was a reference to cut of 300,000 personnel in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), still the world’s largest standing military, announced by President Xi Jinping at a giant military parade in Beijing last September to commemorat­e the 70th anniversar­y of Japan’s World War II defeat.

China’s total declared spending of 954 billion (US$146 billion) remains far below the US$580.3 billion requested by the Pentagon for this fiscal year.

Beijing is looking to create a more effective fighting force and has increased its military heft and asserted its territoria­l claims in the South China Sea, raising tensions with its neighbours and with Washington.

The country will seek to “strengthen the military in all respects so that it is more revolution­ary, modern, and standardis­ed”, the budget report said.

At the start of the year, the Asian giant unveiled a revamped military structure, establishi­ng a new army general command and a Rocket Force to oversee its strategic missiles.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang told the opening session of the parliament: “We will strengthen in a coordinate­d way military preparedne­ss on all fronts and for all scenarios, and work meticulous­ly to ensure combat readiness and border, coastal, and air defence control.

“We should strive to forge an ever closer bond between the military and the government.”

Beijing has built up artificial islands in the disputed South China Sea — through which a third of the world’s oil passes, and which it claims almost in its

We should strive to forge an ever closer bond between the military and the government. — Li Keqiang, Chinese Premier

entirety.

Several other littoral states have competing claims, as does Taiwan.

Satellite pictures show what US analysts say are deployment­s of surface to air missiles and facilities with military uses, such as runways and radar.

At the same time, Beijing is looking to increase naval strength and reach, and officials confirmed in December that its second aircraft carrier — the first to be entirely domestical­ly designed and built — was under constructi­on.

In 2015, the defence budget was increased by 10.1 per cent.

Xinhua news agency carried a commentary yesterday defending China’s spending, saying it could not fend off US and other countries’ intrusions into its waters and airspace with only “sampans and telescopes”. — AFP

 ??  ?? A soldier of the People’s Liberation Army stands guard as paramilita­ry policemen march past in front of the Great Hall of the People ahead of the opening session of the NPC. — Reuters photo Li Keqiang giving his speech during the opening session of the National People’s Congress (NPC). — Reuters photo
A soldier of the People’s Liberation Army stands guard as paramilita­ry policemen march past in front of the Great Hall of the People ahead of the opening session of the NPC. — Reuters photo Li Keqiang giving his speech during the opening session of the National People’s Congress (NPC). — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Journalist­s line up to enter the Great Hall of the People ahead of the opening session of the NPC. — Reuters photo
Journalist­s line up to enter the Great Hall of the People ahead of the opening session of the NPC. — Reuters photo
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