Business World

Marcos to seek Australia’s support vs China as he faces its parliament

- — Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza

PHILIPPINE President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. will seek the support of Australia amid Chinese aggression at sea, the Foreign Affairs department said on Tuesday.

Mr. Marcos is expected to speak before the Australian Parliament during his state visit to Australia on Feb. 28, Foreign Affairs spokespers­on Ma. Teresita C. Daza told a palace news briefing. “It will be the first time a Philippine President will be speaking before the Parliament of Australia.”

His engagement with the Parliament would “help us underscore both countries as maritime nations have actually committed to adherence to the rules-based order and internatio­nal law,” she said.

World leaders who had spoken before the Australian Parliament include former US presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, Hu Jintao of the People’s Republic of China, ex-British Prime Minister Tony Blair, former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Indonesian President Joko Widodo and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The Philippine­s and Australia in September agreed to enhance their partnershi­ps by elevating their relations from a comprehens­ive into a strategic one.

Mr. Marcos, who has been visiting Philippine allies since becoming President in 2022, will return to Australia on March 4 to 6 for a dialogue summit between Canberra and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), Foreign Affairs Assistant Secretary Daniel R. Espiritu said at the same briefing.

The summit in Australia, ASEAN’s oldest dialogue partner and one of the “most active” in economic and political fronts, is an opportunit­y for the Philippine­s to present its stance on internatio­nal issues, he said.

It will also “set the tone for dialogue partner summits later in the year.”

Tensions in the South China Sea, which also worry Canberra, and ties in defense and security would also be discussed during Mr. Marcos’ visit to Australia, Ms. Daza said.

“We have very strong defense and security relations with Australia, and they’ve been partners with us for a long time, even before the official establishm­ent of relations, because they were with us as partners during World War II,” she said.

Ms. Daza said the Philippine­s is expected to sign economic and security agreements with Australia during the President’s visit.

The Philippine­s has the fifth-largest immigrant community in Australia, with about 408,000 Filipinos living there, Ms. Daza said.

Most Filipinos there work as craft and trade workers and profession­al service and sales workers. Most of them work for Australian companies in agricultur­e, forestry and fishery.

Australia has also been a key destinatio­n for Filipino students seeking higher education, she said. The country had almost 18,000 internatio­nal students from the Philippine­s in 2022.

The Philippine­s received more than 2,600 tourists from Australia last year.

 ?? PHILIPPINE PRESIDENT FERDINAND R. MARCOS, JR. ??
PHILIPPINE PRESIDENT FERDINAND R. MARCOS, JR.

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