Khaleej Times

Manila to boost military facilities in S. China Sea

- Reuters

manila — The Philippine­s said on Friday it would strengthen its military facilities on islands and shoals in the disputed South China Sea and announced initial plans to build a new port and pave an existing rough airstrip.

Defence Minister Delfin Lorenzana had been scheduled to inspect an outpost on Thitu, one of the disputed Spratly Islands, but his trip was cancelled because of “safety issues” and he spent the day instead at a military base where he unveiled the developmen­t plans.

“We will build a runway and a port, a pier, for our ships” on Thitu, Lorenzana told troops at the Western Command’s 41st anniversar­y. “We are a bit blind in that area.”

Thitu is close to Subi Reef, one of seven manmade islands in the Spratlys that China is accused of militarisi­ng with surface-to-air missiles and other armaments.

The Philippine­s has squabbled with China for years over the South China Sea, but relations appear to have improved under President Rodrigo Duterte, who was scheduled to meet Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang in Davao City in the southern Philippine­s on Friday.

The minister said Duterte had given approval to upgrade facilities not only on Thitu but on the eight other features in the South China Sea it occupies.

Defence ministry spokesman Arsenio Andolong said landing on a porous runway would have been dangerous.

A senior Philippine general said, however, the military also blocked a planned trip by a group of lawmakers to Thitu on Thursday, more because of concern over how China would react.

“That is a contested area, that is not 100 percent ours,” Lieutenant­General Raul del Rosario told a Congressio­nal hearing on Thursday.

“That’s why we are concerned if you fly there. Every time an aircraft flies there, it gets a warning and there are times they fire flares towards the aircraft.”—

We will build a runway and a port, a pier, for our ships. We are a bit blind in that area Delfin Lorenzana, Defence minister

 ?? AFP ?? Students wave Philippine and Chinese flags as they welcome China’s Vice Premier Wang Yang (not seen) as he visits Fort Santigao in Intramuros, Manila, on Saturday. —
AFP Students wave Philippine and Chinese flags as they welcome China’s Vice Premier Wang Yang (not seen) as he visits Fort Santigao in Intramuros, Manila, on Saturday. —
 ?? AFP ?? Rapid Action Battalion personnel and bomb experts stand at the site where the militant was shot dead in Khilgaon, Dhaka. —
AFP Rapid Action Battalion personnel and bomb experts stand at the site where the militant was shot dead in Khilgaon, Dhaka. —

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