Business Day

Kamala Harris to discuss Taiwan on Philippine­s visit

- Karen Lema Manila

Tension over Taiwan is expected to be on the agenda when US vice-president Kamala Harris meets Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos next week, Manila’s ambassador to Washington said on Thursday.

“I’m sure they will touch on the Taiwan situation,” ambassador Jose Manuel Romualdez told Reuters, adding that the Philippine­s wants to play a role in peaceful coexistenc­e between the US and China.

Harris is likely to give Marcos a “fairly good briefing” on the three-hour meeting between US President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of this week’s summit of the G20 group of countries in Indonesia, Romualdez said.

Beijing has long said it would bring the self-governed island of Taiwan, which it views as an inalienabl­e part of China, under its control and has not ruled out the use of force to do so. It has frequently accused the US in recent years of encouragin­g Taiwan independen­ce.

“What happens in Taiwan, it will affect the entire ASEAN [Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations] region. If there is a conflict that happens in Taiwan, nobody is going to be spared,” Romualdez said. “The Philippine­s is part of this equation.”

Harris’s trip is her second to Asia in three months and the first to the Philippine­s. It will include a stop on the islands of Palawan on the edge of the disputed South China Sea, in a move that Beijing may see as a rebuke.

Beijing claims territorie­s in the waters off Palawan and much of the South China Sea, citing their own historical maps. A 2016 internatio­nal arbitratio­n ruling, however, said the Chinese claims had no legal basis, in a victory for Manila that has yet to be enforced.

Harris is the highest-ranking US official to visit the Southeast Asian nation since it elected Marcos, the son of the late strongman who Washington helped to flee into exile in Hawaii during a 1986 “people power” uprising.

In August, secretary of state Antony Blinken met Marcos to affirm US commitment to the defence of the Philippine­s, its long-time treaty ally.

“All of these visits are clearly an indication of how serious they see our relationsh­ip with the US as more important than ever because of what’s happening in this side of the world,” Romualdez said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Diplomatic visit: US vice-president Kamala Harris is making her second trip to Asia in three months and the first to the Philippine­s.
/Reuters Diplomatic visit: US vice-president Kamala Harris is making her second trip to Asia in three months and the first to the Philippine­s.

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