Friday, April 3, 2015

India, Japan to exchange shipping info about Indian Ocean, South China Sea Reported by: `Customs Today Report April 3, 2015

India, Japan to exchange shipping info about Indian Ocean, South China Sea

NEW DELHI: India and Japan has decided to exchange shipping information about Indian Ocean and South China Sea, even as they bolster their bilateral strategic partnership.
While the annual defence dialogue (AAD) between Defence Minister, Manohar Parrikar and his Japanese counterpart Gen Nakatani in Tokyo took a slew of decisions to strengthen defence ties, sources said the two sides also discussed the proposed exchange of maritime information.
“India can provide Japan with ‘white shipping data’ about Indian Ocean, where we have the resources to monitor things. Japan, in turn, can give us information about South China Sea, where we have some strategic interests. India and Vietnam, for instance, are working on joint oil exploration in the South China Sea” said a source.
India is trying to tie up with as many as 24 countries — from the African east coast to South China Sea — for exchanging shipping data under its overall national maritime domain awareness (NMDA) project to strengthen security both from conventional as well as unconventional threats.
While the exchange of data would deal primarily with merchant shipping, both India and Japan remain worried about China’s expanding trans-border military capabilities as well as its assertive behaviour in the Asia-Pacific region, especially in the contentious South and East China Seas where it is embroiled in territorial disputes with its neighbours.
Japanese PM Shinzo Abe, who shares a personal rapport with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi, in fact told Parrikar that “a strong” India-Japan partnership was not only in the “national interest of the two” but also “important for peace and security in the region”.

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