China Daily (Hong Kong)

Duterte expected to visit China again

Beijing and Manila agree to manage maritime issue through consultati­on

- By WANG QINGYUN wangqingyu­n @chinadaily.com.cn

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is expected to visit China again and attend an internatio­nal summit, after his state visit in October significan­tly improved China-Philippine ties.

According to an online statement by the Foreign Ministry, the Philippine president told visiting Vice-Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin in Manila on Tuesday that he will attend the Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Summit Forum on the Belt and Road Initiative in Beijing in May, saying he is looking forward to meeting President Xi Jinping again.

Zhou Fangyin, a professor studying China’s foreign policy at the Guangdong Institute for Internatio­nal Strategies, said Duterte’s words show that the Philippine­s wants to “rank in the front row” among countries in terms of its economic and trade cooperatio­n with China.

They also show that the Philippine­s has a “very positive attitude” toward the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road under Duterte’s administra­tion, and wants more pragmatic benefits from participat­ing in the initiative.

The economic foundation for bilateral ties is likely to be strengthen­ed after Duterte attends the forum, Zhou predicted.

During consultati­ons Liu co-hosted with his Philippine counterpar­t, Enrique Manalo, in Manila on Wednesday, China and the Philippine­s agreed that the South China Sea situation “is just a very small issue” compared with the friendly bilateral ties that keep strengthen­ing. The two sides also agreed to set up a bilateral consultati­on mechanism over the South China Sea issue led by their foreign ministries.

Both sides believe they should properly handle disputes and promote pragmatic maritime cooperatio­n before the issue is finally resolved, and they will work with other ASEAN countries to actively push forward negotiatio­ns over the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea.

Since being elected president, Duterte has shown his intentions to play down and resolve maritime disputes with China through negotiatio­ns, and paid a state visit to China in October, which significan­tly eased tensions.

His visit also saw the countries sign a wide range of cooperatio­n deals, including for transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, agricultur­e, production capacity and investment.

Zhou said that neither China nor the Philippine­s likes to see the South China Sea issue blocking bilateral cooperatio­n, and Duterte’s position is clear: “He doesn’t want outside forces to play up maritime disputes.”

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