The Philippine Star

Phl, Japan to hold talks on infra deals

- By ELIJAH FELICE ROSALES

The Philippine­s and Japan will hold another high-level meeting to discuss the status of infrastruc­ture how to speed them up partnershi­ps and moving forward.

The Department of Finance yesterday said the two countries will convene the Philippine­sJapan High Level Joint Committee on Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t and Economic Cooperatio­n through a video conference on Feb. 16.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III will chair the Philippine side, while Mori Masafuni, the special advisor to Prime Minister Fumio Kishida of Japan, will lead the Japanese delegation.

The joint panel will tackle the accomplish­ments reached by the government in completing some of the infrastruc­ture projects financed by Japan. Updates on ongoing public works like the Metro Manila Subway Project and North-South Commuter Railway, and rehabilita­tion efforts such as on Metro Rail Transit Line 3 will also be discussed.

The two camps plan to talk about how financing can be improved in accelerati­ng measures to recover from the pandemic. Likewise, the Philippine­s will report on developmen­ts reached in Japanfunde­d programs supporting the Mindanao peace process.

In 2017, the joint committee agreed to convene in Tokyo to settle how the two countries intend to move forward in its partnershi­ps on economic cooperatio­n and infrastruc­ture buildup.

Former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe committed to extend one trillion yen, about $9 billion, in funding packages to bankroll programs and projects embarked on by the Duterte administra­tion until 2022.

Abe then ordered the establishm­ent of the Joint Committee on Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t and Economic Cooperatio­n to coordinate the assistance.

The financing commitment was completed in July 2021 under thenprime minister Yoshihide Suga, who served as the chief Cabinet secretary under former prime minister Abe’s term. On top of public infrastruc­ture, the Japanese aid goes to initiative­s to reconstruc­t areas in Bangsamoro devastated by the armed conflict.

Through various internatio­nal groups, Japan provided the Philippine­s with an emergency grant worth $13 million in January. The funding was directed for the humanitari­an assistance activities for the victims of Typhoon Odette that destroyed communitie­s mostly in Visayas and Mindanao.

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