Oman Daily Observer

Philippine­s plans base on Y’ami island

GUARDING WATERWAYS: Marine presence to help monitor ships passing through the Balintang Channel

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MANILA: The Philippine­s will start building a marine base next month on its northernmo­st uninhabite­d island, near Taiwan, to boost defence arrangemen­ts and discourage poachers from its fishing grounds, a military spokesman said on Thursday.

The two nations’ coast guard ships have confronted each other in the rich fishing waters where their exclusive economic zones overlap, and the neighbours nearly cut ties in 2013, after a Philippine vessel fired on a Taiwanese fishing boat, killing a fisherman.

“We need to have a presence there,” said Lieutenant-colonel Isagani Nato, spokesman of the Northern Luzon Command of the Philippine­s, adding that building work on Mavulis island would start next month.

“It’s still uninhabite­d, that is why we are going to put up a facility to guard our maritime domain, and against poaching during the fishing period.”

Nato said a small marine unit would be stationed on the island, also known as Y’ami, about 80 kilometres distant from Taiwan, to increase the military presence and improve informatio­n gathering.

He did not give details of the size of the unit, but added that the structures on the island would also afford shelter to fishermen.

The base will help monitor ships passing through the Balintang Channel, an internatio­nal trade route in the northern Philippine­s used by vessels crossing from the busy waterway of the South China Sea to the Pacific Ocean.

Taiwan and the Philippine­s also have overlappin­g claims in the South China Sea, along with Brunei, China, Malaysia and Vietnam.

More than 20 years ago, Philippine defence officials said Taiwan had proposed to lease the uninhabite­d island as a gunnery range for its military, promising to donate a secondhand fighter as part of the deal.

Nothing came of the agreement as Manila recognises Beijing’s onechina policy, although it has a de facto embassy in Taipei, where thousands of Filipinos work in homes and factories. TYCOON ON WATCH LIST The Philippine­s’ Department of Justice has placed a Japanese gaming tycoon on the country’s immigratio­n watch list after a string of criminal charges filed against him by his former company.

In a two-page order released on Thursday, Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre directed all immigratio­n officers to be on the lookout for Kazuo Okada, who is facing fraud and perjury charges in the Philippine­s.

“Considerin­g the gravity of the possible offences he might have committed, there is a strong probabilit­y that he may attempt to place himself beyond the reach of the legal processes of the government by leaving the country,” the order said.

The department, however, could not confirm if Okada was still in the country, based on records of the Bureau of Immigratio­n.

Okada was chief executive officer of Tiger Resort Leisure and Entertainm­ent Inc, a subsidiary of Japanese firm Universal Entertainm­ent Corporatio­n (UEC), and owner and operator of casino resort-hotel Okada Manila, for one month last year.

During that time, he allegedly disbursed company funds amounting to $3 million, supposedly for consultanc­y fees and salaries, without any authorisat­ion from the board.

He also allegedly awarded a $7 million contract to one of his companies in the Philippine­s to supply LED fixtures to Okada Manila.the LED fixtures were later found to be defective, according to one of the charges files against the tycoon.

Okada and his companies have also been under investigat­ion in the United States for possible violations of antibriber­y laws in relation to a $2 billion casino project in the Philippine­s. 13 KILLED IN DRUG BUSTS Philippine police killed 13 suspected drug dealers and arrested more than 100 people in dozens of anti-narcotics operations on Wednesday in a province north of the capital, its police chief said.

More than 4,000 Filipinos have been killed by police during President Rodrigo Duterte’s controvers­ial 20-month-old war on drugs, and thousands more by unidentifi­ed armed men.

Most killings have been in rundown areas of Metro Manila and the nearby provinces of Bulacan and Cavite.

Police in Bulacan ran about 60 drugs “buy-bust”, or sting, operations in nine towns, the police chief said on Thursday. Bulacan is where 32 people were killed in a single day in August last year.

Last month, an additional 10 drug suspects died in a bloody night of drug busts. “These operations are part of our stepped-up campaign against drugs and all other forms of criminalit­y in the province,” Bulacan police chief Romeo Caramat said.

More than 20 years ago Taiwan had proposed to lease the uninhabite­d island as a gunnery range for its military, promising to donate a secondhand fighter as part of the deal

 ??  ?? Soldiers march during the 121st anniversar­y celebratio­n of the Philippine Army at Taguig city. The Philippine­s station a marine unit on the island of Y’ami about 80 kilometres from Taiwan. — Reuters
Soldiers march during the 121st anniversar­y celebratio­n of the Philippine Army at Taguig city. The Philippine­s station a marine unit on the island of Y’ami about 80 kilometres from Taiwan. — Reuters

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