The Philippine Star

Rody junks EU aid for Phl

- By PIA LEE-BRAGO and CHRISTINA MENDEZ

The Duterte administra­tion announced yesterday it will reject new grants from the European Union (EU), possibly forgoing some 250 million euros or roughly $278.7 million in funds for developmen­t projects in the country, particular­ly in Muslim Mindanao.

The announceme­nt came after President Duterte received over $1 billion in pledges of official developmen­t aid from China where he recently attended the Belt and Road Summit along with 30 other heads of state.

The EU is the Philippine­s’ largest export market. The EU delegation in Manila said it was informed by the govern- ment of its decision Wednesday, but it has yet to receive formal notice.

“The President has approved the recommenda­tion of the Department of Finance not to accept grants from the EU that may allow it to interfere with internal policies of the Philippine­s,” presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella told reporters at Malacañang. “The Philippine­s reserves the right to accept loans and grants that help attain its objectives of promoting economic developmen­t, inclusiven­ess, and reducing poverty, attaining peace within its borders and with its neighbors, and fostering a law-abiding society,” Abella said. “It also reserves the right to

respectful­ly decline offers that do not achieve these goals and offers that allow foreigners to interfere with the conduct of its internal affairs,” he added.

The decision to reject new EU grants was meant “to discourage them from interferin­g with our internal affairs,” Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea said.

The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said it is not yet aware of the details of the rejection of EU assistance.

“We haven’t seen the details. We still need to clarify the de- tails,” Foreign Affairs spokesman Robespierr­e Bolivar said.

President Duterte had challenged the EU to stop its assistance after the bloc warned that the Philippine­s risks losing tariff-free exports to Europe because of the thousands killed in his war on drugs and his move to revive the death penalty. “If you think it is high time for you to withdraw your assistance, go ahead, we will not beg for it,” Duterte said in a speech in October directed at the EU, the United States and other critics.

The European Parliament was one of the first in- stitutions that called Duterte’s attention to rising cases of summary executions and human rights violations in the course of his so-called war on drugs.

EU Ambassador Franz Jessen said more than 250 million euros or roughly $278.7 million worth of grants could be at stake.

“We are still awaiting more detailed clarificat­ion from the government,” Jessen said in an email to the AP. “The amount possibly concerned by the new decision is 250 million euro plus. For this year the amount affected could be 100 million euro.”

On Tuesday, Jessen made it clear in an interview with The STAR that EU is “not interferin­g in the domestic affairs here.” He was commenting on ASEAN’s call on its dialogue partners at a recent summit to honor the principle of “non interferen­ce” in the internal affairs of member-states.

Developmen­t projects currently using EU assistance include a 35-million euro ($39 million) grant to support the peace process with Muslim rebels in Mindanao. The EU is the largest foreign investor in the Philippine­s, the only member of the 10-nation Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations to enjoy duty-free exports under EU’s Generalize­d Scheme of Preference­s or GSP incentives for developing countries.

The Philippine’s duty-free exports to EU were worth around 1.6 billion euros in 2016, according to EU delegation data.

In March, the EU summoned Charge d’Affaires Alan Deniega to its Brussels headquarte­rs to provide “an explanatio­n for the recent, unacceptab­le comments of President Duterte,” particular­ly his threat to hang EU officials for opposing his efforts to re-impose the death penalty.

The move highlights growing European exasperati­on with the President. Earlier, the EU denied his allegation­s that it proposed solving the Philippine­s’ drug problem by creating treatment clinics where illegal drugs such as methamphet­amine or cocaine would be dispensed.

Existing aid stays

Abella explained that existing grants will remain, and the new policy will cover only new ones.

The Palace may still accept some grants from the EU but it will be a different matter “when it begins to impose certain conditiona­lities that will interfere with the way we handle things, that we consider objectiona­ble,” he stressed.

Pressed to elaborate, Abella said Duterte was merely expressing his government’s decision “not to accept grants that will compromise our internal integrity otherwise we will be forced (to comply).”

“It’s simply stressing that ‘let’s maintain our independen­t foreign policy.’ All are being notified,” he added.

The Palace did not say whether the policy had something to do with Duterte’s tirades against the EU and his previous statements that the government could forgo with EU grants if the bloc continued criticizin­g his vicious anti-drug campaign.

Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said he hopes that the current GSP won’t be affected.

“It’s not a grant and they’re commercial transactio­ns that can mutually benefit both sides,” Lopez said. “EU should continue to engage the country. GSP provides better market access to our exporters but it allows cheaper Philippine products for EU consumers or cheaper inputs for their manufactur­ers,” he said.

“EU investors in the country that exports back to EU also benefit from the GSP. It’s a mutually beneficial arrangemen­t,” Lopez added.

A large part of EU developmen­t aid has been earmarked for the peace process with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and communist rebels.

According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, exports to EU amounted to a total of $901 million as of March this year, the same month it overtook the US and Japan as the Philippine­s’ biggest export destinatio­n.

Among the top destinatio­ns of Philippine products are Germany, the Netherland­s, United Kingdom, France, Spain, Malta and Cyprus.

The top Philippine­s products shipped to EU were integrated circuits/microassem­blies, computers, optical readers; coconut/palm/babassu oil; cruise/cargo ships, barges; electrical converters/power units; solar power diodes/semi-conductors; regulating/control instrument­s; aircraft parts; computer parts, accessorie­s; fish, caviar (preserved/prepared). The Philippine­s is also the biggest supplier of seamen for EU vessels.

Meanwhile, the Department of Health (DOH) downplayed the possible effect of the rejection of EU aid on the department’s program.

“It won’t affect us because as far as the (EU) commitment is concerned, it is a done deal,” DOH spokesman Eric Tayag said in an ambush interview.

He maintained that such a rejection might even work in favor of the Philippine­s as it could compel the country to become self-reliant.

He cited the case of the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t’s gradual pullout of its contracept­ive donations

to the Philippine­s in mid-2000.

“For so many years, we depended on foreign donations of contracept­ives. But we have to be self reliant and we cannot always ask others for help,” he said.

The country continues to receive some donations from foreign agencies like the United Nations Population Fund.

Sharing Tayag’s optimism was former health chief Esperanza Cabral who also underscore­d the need for the Philippine­s to learn to stand on its own feet.

“The DOH has money coming out of its ears. So what is important now is to know how to use it wisely. Having no money can no longer be used as an excuse. Even if we still have shortage of funds, the shortage is not as much as before,” Cabral said.

Janet Garin, also a former health chief, agreed but explained that unlike other foreign donors, EU gives “without expecting anything in return.”

 ?? AFP ?? Cecilia Malmstrom, European Union commission­er for trade, joins Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez at a press conference during the 23rd Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Economic Ministers’ Retreat and Related Meetings in Manila last March 10.
AFP Cecilia Malmstrom, European Union commission­er for trade, joins Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez at a press conference during the 23rd Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Economic Ministers’ Retreat and Related Meetings in Manila last March 10.

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