Manila Bulletin

Japan to build four radar stations to help PH counter piracy surge

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TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan will build four coast guard radar stations on islands in the Sulu-Celebes Sea separating the Philippine­s and Indonesia to help Manila counter a surge in piracy by Islamic insurgents, two sources said.

An agreement to fund the facilities and provide training to local coast guard personnel may be signed

as early as next week by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte in Manila, the sources said.

“The seas in that area are an important waterway for merchant ships traveling to Japanese ports,” one of the people with knowledge of the plan said. The sources asked not to be identified because they are not authorized to talk to the media.

Of 30 acts of piracy reported in the first half of 2017, six involved the use of guns, of which three were crew abductions from ships underway in the Sulu Celebes Sea, according to the Regional Cooperatio­n Agreement on Combating Piracy and Armed Robbery against Ships in Asia (ReCAAP). Four attempted abductions in the waters were also logged.

Japan will fund the constructi­on of the radar stations through its Overseas Developmen­t Aid (ODA) budget, the sources said.

“Japan is aware of the need to counter piracy in the region and is keen to help, but we can’t discuss individual projects,” said an official at Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which oversees ODA spending.

The radar stations are part of a wider aid package that include helicopter parts for the Philippine­s military, financing for infrastruc­ture projects such as rail lines, and help to rebuild conflict-torn southern Marawi City after five months of military operations against Islamic State rebels.

By providing such aid, Tokyo is aiming to deepen economic and security ties with Manila as it looks to contain China’s growing power. Japan sees the Philippine­s, which lies on the eastern side of the South China Sea, as a key ally in helping prevent Beijing’s influence spreading into the western Pacific.

Abe will travel to the Philippine­s on Monday following a two day gathering of regional leaders at an Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) forum in Vietnam.

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