Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Philippines does not fear ‘economic backlash’ from China By Kristine Angeli Sabillo INQUIRER.net 3:15 pm | Wednesday, April 2nd, 2014

PH does not fear ‘economic backlash’ from China

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Communications Secretary Herminio Coloma (INQUIRER FILE PHOTO) and Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei (AP FILE PHOTO)
MANILA, Philippines – Who is afraid of China? Not the Philippines.
Malacañang on Wednesday said it will protect the country’s national interest, including its economy, in the face of threats from China over maritime disputes in the West Philippine Sea.
“It is the duty of government to promote the welfare of its citizens and to ensure the orderly and stable growth of our national economy,” Communications Secretary Herminio Coloma said in a press briefing.
The statement came a day after Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei warned that the Philippines “will have to take the consequences caused by its provocative actions.”
Coloma did not elaborate on how exactly the Aquino administration will address possible sanctions from China, stating instead that its preparations were “a continuing duty of government.”
The Secretary also downplayed China’s pronouncements that the government’s decision to push through with arbitration before the United Nations (UN) International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) seriously injured the two countries’ bilateral ties.
Coloma said the Philippine government believes that Philippine-China relations extend beyond the West Philippine Sea issue.
“Iyong pakikipagugnayan natin sa People’s Republic of China ay mayroong kasaysayan na batay din sa pakikipagkaibigan at pakikipagtulungan. Marami pong larangan na maaaring maisulong o maitaguyod ang kooperasyon at ang pakikipagkaibigan ng dalawang bansa,” he said.
(Our relationship with the People’s Republic of China has a history based on friendship and cooperation. There are a lot of areas where we can establish and promote the cooperation and friendship between the two countries.)
In February, Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima gave a similar statement, pointing out that the two countries do not have a “one-dimensional relationship.”
China remained one of the country’s biggest trading partners last year amid the ongoing maritime dispute in West Philippine Sea.
Philippine exports to China reached $746.82 million last December or 79 percent up the year before, making it the country’s third largest export market. Meanwhile, goods imported from China, the Philippines’ biggest source of imports, reached $671.12 million in November.


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