Business World

Japan gives Malaysia two patrol boats as PM Najib visits Tokyo

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TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Wednesday that Tokyo will give Malaysia two patrol boats, a move that visiting Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak welcomed as an aid to promoting stability in the South China Sea.

Mr. Najib arrived in Japan on Tuesday on a visit that comes just weeks after he was in China on a six- day visit in which he agreed to buy four Chinese patrol boats in his nation’s first significan­t defense deal with China.

“Today’s agreement — Japan is willing to hand over two decommissi­oned patrol vessels to our maritime enforcemen­t agency — shows the nature of our relationsh­ip is now broad-based,” Mr. Najib said.

Malaysia, along with three other members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) — the Philippine­s, Vietnam and Brunei — are among the countries contesting territoria­l claims with China over the South China Sea. China claims nearly the entire body of water as its territory.

Mr. Najib said talks with Mr. Abe touched on this issue, adding: “Malaysia continues to play its part to ensure the South China Sea will be an area of peace and stability, without which we cannot achieve prosperity.”

Discussion­s also included the planned high- speed rail link between Singapore and the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur, set to be built by 2026 and with the two neighbors set to finalise a bilateral agreement in December.

Japan has expressed interest in the project, and Mr. Najib said he had assured Mr. Abe that the bidding process would be conducted in a fair and transparen­t way.

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