Manila to develop new port near Taiwan, minus US help


THE United States military will not be involved in development of a port in the Philippines’ remote northernmost islands near Taiwan, the local governor said, removing a potential source of friction with China over the US presence in the region.

The governor of the Batanes islands, less than 200km from Taiwan, said in August she had sought US funding for a new port there.

The US embassy had at the time confirmed its diplomats and US Army Pacific experts had been engaging local authorities on various support measures for the islands.

“At first they said they will help but later on, no more, so I asked help from PPA,” governor Marilou Cayco told Reuters in a message, referring to the Philippine Ports Authority (PPA) on Friday.

The project was intended to help the unloading of cargo from the capital, Manila, during rough seas in the monsoon season, when an existing facility is often inaccessible. The US embassy on Friday said it had no immediate comment on the issue.

US military involvement in the Batanes port could have stoked tension at a time of growing friction with China and a drive by Washington to intensify its longstanding defence engagements with the Philippines, which Beijing has viewed with suspicion.

The Bashi Channel between the Batanes islands and Taiwan is considered a choke point for vessels moving between the western Pacific and the contested South China Sea and would be a key waterway in the case of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.

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The Chinese military regularly sends ships and aircraft through the channel, Taiwan’s defence ministry has said.

In statement released to the media on Friday, the Chinese embassy in Manila said Taiwan was an internal matter for China so it should never become an issue between China and the Philippines. — Reuters

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