Philippines to hold joint naval drills with US, Japan, Australia

Philippines to hold joint naval drills with US, Japan, Australia
Philippine and Australian soldiers march in formation while a US marines V-22 Osprey hovers above during military exercise Alon (wave), a joint amphibious landing drill held at a naval base in San Antonio town in Zambales province, north of Manila on August 25, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 04 April 2024
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Philippines to hold joint naval drills with US, Japan, Australia

Philippines to hold joint naval drills with US, Japan, Australia
  • Regional tensions have escalated in the past year as China becomes increasingly confident in asserting its claims over waters also claimed by the Philippines and Japan

MANILA: The Philippines will hold joint naval drills with the US, Japan and Australia, two diplomatic sources told AFP Thursday, as the four countries deepen military ties to counter China’s expanding influence in the Asia-Pacific region.
The exercise will be held Sunday in the disputed South China Sea — which Beijing claims almost entirely — days before US President Joe Biden is due to hold the first trilateral summit with the leaders of the Philippines and Japan.
The diplomatic sources spoke on condition of anonymity because the drills have not yet been officially announced.
Earlier this week, the Australian warship HMAS Warramunga arrived at the Philippine island province of Palawan, which faces the hotly contested waters.
The Philippine military said the visit was “aimed at strengthening military relations with partner nations.”
Regional tensions have escalated in the past year as China becomes increasingly confident in asserting its claims over waters also claimed by the Philippines and Japan, as well as over self-ruled Taiwan.
In response, the United States has sought to strengthen its alliances in the region, including with treaty allies Japan and the Philippines.
Biden’s planned April 11 summit with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at the White House will be the latest in a series of meetings with Asia-Pacific partners.
Biden will also hold separate bilateral meetings with Marcos and Kishida.
Joint patrols between the US, Japanese and Philippine coast guards are expected to be announced during the summit, one of the diplomatic sources told AFP, after joint drills were held for the first time last year.
The exercise and summit follow repeated confrontations between Chinese and Philippine vessels near disputed reefs off the Southeast Asian country in recent months.
Top US officials have repeatedly declared the United States’ “ironclad” commitment to defending the Philippines against an armed attack in the South China Sea.
Relations between Manila and Beijing have deteriorated under Marcos, who has taken a stronger stance than his predecessor Rodrigo Duterte against Chinese actions in the sea.
China claims most of the waterway, through which trillions of dollars worth of trade passes annually, despite rival claims from other nations and an international ruling that its claim has no legal basis.
Marcos issued a strongly worded statement on March 28, vowing the Philippines would not be “cowed into silence, submission, or subservience” by China.
He also said the Philippines would respond to recent incidents with countermeasures that would be “proportionate, deliberate, and reasonable.”
Meanwhile, talks between the Philippines and Japan for a defense pact that would allow the countries to deploy troops on each other’s territory were “still ongoing,” a spokesman for the Philippine foreign affairs department told reporters Thursday.
Manila already has a similar agreement with Australia and the United States.


Taiwan sends forces in response to China ‘live-fire’ drills off island

Taiwan sends forces in response to China ‘live-fire’ drills off island
Updated 6 sec ago
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Taiwan sends forces in response to China ‘live-fire’ drills off island

Taiwan sends forces in response to China ‘live-fire’ drills off island
TAIPEI: Taiwan sent forces on Wednesday in response to China’s “live-fire” drills off the self-ruled island, Taipei’s defense ministry said, condemning the exercises as dangerous.
China deployed 32 aircraft near Taiwan as part of a joint combat drill with Chinese warships and announced “live-fire exercises” in an area about 40 nautical miles (74 kilometers) off the island’s south, the ministry said in a statement.
Taiwan’s military responded by sending sea, air and land forces to “monitor, alert and respond appropriately,” the statement said.
China’s People’s Liberation Army “has blatantly violated international norms by unilaterally designating a drill zone 40 NM off the coast of Kaohsiung and Pingtung, claiming to conduct live-fire exercises without prior warning,” the ministry said.
“This move not only caused a high degree of danger to the safety of international flights and vessels at sea, but is also a blatant provocation to regional security and stability.”
Taiwan has naval and air bases in Kaohsiung and Pingtung.
China has ramped up the deployment of fighter jets and warships around Taiwan in recent years to press its claim of sovereignty over the island, which Taipei rejects.
Taiwan’s defense ministry said China’s move “is completely contrary to its repeated claims of ‘peaceful coexistence’ principles” and vowed to “continue our efforts in force buildup and readiness.”
Beijing’s foreign ministry declined to comment on Taiwan saying China has set up a drill zone for “shooting training.”
“This is not a question on foreign affairs,” spokesman Lin Jian told reporters.
China’s defense ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment from AFP.


Taipei’s defense ministry said China’s actions in the region, including live-fire drills off Australia and Vietnam, “prove that China is the only and biggest threat to peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait and the Indo-Pacific region.”
The drills also come after Taiwan seized a Chinese-crewed cargo ship on Tuesday suspected of severing a subsea telecoms cable serving Taiwan’s Penghu island group.
There is growing concern in Taiwan over the security of its cables after a Chinese-owned cargo ship was suspected of cutting one northeast of the island this year.
China’s Communist Party has never ruled democratic Taiwan but Beijing has threatened to use force to bring the island under its control.
Taiwan fears China could sever its communication links as part of an attempt to seize the island or to blockade it.
Taiwan is also a potential flashpoint for a war between China and the United States, which is the island’s most important backer and biggest arms supplier.
While the United States is legally bound to provide arms to Taiwan, Washington has long maintained “strategic ambiguity” when it comes to whether it would deploy its military to defend it from a Chinese attack.
Despite strong bipartisan support in the US Congress for Taiwan, there are fears that President Donald Trump might not consider the island worth defending if China attacked.
Taiwan President Lai Ching-te has already vowed to boost investment in the United States to reduce the trade imbalance and spend more on the island’s military, while his government is also considering increasing US natural gas imports.
Beijing regards Lai as a “separatist” and has staged several rounds of major military exercises since he came to power last May.
The dispute between Beijing and Taipei dates back to the civil war between Mao Zedong’s communist fighters and Chiang Kai-shek’s nationalist forces, which fled to Taiwan in 1949 following their defeat.

18 dead in a bus crash in eastern Thailand

18 dead in a bus crash in eastern Thailand
Updated 4 min 53 sec ago
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18 dead in a bus crash in eastern Thailand

18 dead in a bus crash in eastern Thailand
BANGKOK: A chartered bus overturned in eastern Thailand early Wednesday morning, killing 18 people and injuring 31, officials said.
The accident occurred in Prachinburi province during an overnight journey from northern Thailand to coastal Rayong province for a municipal study tour.
The Department of Land Transport said it would coordinate with police in investigating the latest road accident and would intensify inspections of all public transport vehicles to ensure they meet safety standards.
Road safety is a major problem in Thailand, which according to the World Health Organization ranks ninth out of 175 member countries for road traffic deaths.
The issue was highlighted in October last year, after 23 young students and teachers died in a horrific bus fire while on a school field trip. Negligent maintenance and inspections were suspected of contributing to the tragedy.
In December 2023, a bus crash in the western province of Prachuap Khiri Khan killed 14 people and injured more than 30 others. The vehicle was carrying 49 people when it ran off the road and hit a tree. Police investigated the possibility that its driver had fallen asleep.

Hong Kong is to cut thousands of civil service jobs and invest in AI to tackle a rising deficit

Hong Kong is to cut thousands of civil service jobs and invest in AI to tackle a rising deficit
Updated 22 min 21 sec ago
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Hong Kong is to cut thousands of civil service jobs and invest in AI to tackle a rising deficit

Hong Kong is to cut thousands of civil service jobs and invest in AI to tackle a rising deficit
HONG KONG: Hong Kong will cut thousands of civil service jobs and boost spending in artificial intelligence as it seeks to tackle an increasing deficit, authorities said Wednesday.
Finance Secretary Paul Chan said during a budget speech that there would be a “cumulative reduction” of government recurrent expenditure by 7 percent from now until 2027-2028. Hong Kong’s deficit had reached $87.2 billion Hong Kong dollars ($11.2 billion) for the financial year of 2024-2025, making it the third straight year of losses.
“It gives us a clear pathway toward the goal of restoring fiscal balance,” Chan said.
He said 10,000 civil servant posts would be cut by April 2027, representing a reduction of about 2 percent of the civil service in each of the next two years. Salaries will also be frozen in the civil service this year.
Chan also said that up to $195 billion Hong Kong dollars ($25 billion) worth of bonds will also be issued in the next five years to ensure progress of important infrastructure projects, with more than half used to refinance sort-term debt.
To boost income, Hong Kong will also raise its airport departure tax from 120 Hong Kong dollars ($15.50) to 200 Hong Kong dollars ($25.70) from the third quarter of the year, representing a 67 percent increase.
Separately, Hong Kong will also make a push into artificial intelligence by leveraging the city’s “internationalized characteristic to develop Hong Kong into an international exchange and co-operation hub for the AI industry.”
Authorities have also earmarked $1 billion Hong Kong dollars for an AI research and development institute, and will set up a $10 billion ($1.29 billion) innovation and technology fund to invest in “emerging and future industries of strategic importance.”
Hong Kong’s finances have been impacted by a weak property sector, as home prices plunged some 30 percent over the last three years. It is also grappling with economic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions as US-China relations deteriorate.
The amount of land premiums paid by developers to the government has declined, hurting Hong Kong’s revenues. Land sales typically made up about a fifth of government income, but this has fallen to just above 5 percent in the last fiscal year.
Hong Kong’s fiscal reserves will shrink 12 percent from $734.5 billion Hong Kong dollars ($94.5 billion) to about $647.3 billion Hong Kong dollars ($83.3 billion) by the end of March, and a further 10 percent in 2025-26, Chan said.

Malaysia jails Israeli for seven years on firearms offenses 

Malaysia jails Israeli for seven years on firearms offenses 
Updated 26 February 2025
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Malaysia jails Israeli for seven years on firearms offenses 

Malaysia jails Israeli for seven years on firearms offenses 
  • Authorities said Avitan claimed to be in Malaysia to hunt down another Israeli citizen over a family dispute

KUALA LUMPUR: A Malaysian court sentenced an Israeli man to seven years in prison on Wednesday after he pleaded guilty to carrying six guns and dozens of bullets, his lawyer said.
Shalom Avitan, 39, was arrested last March at a hotel in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, and later charged with unauthorized trafficking and possession of firearms, while a married Malaysian couple was charged with supplying him the weapons.
Authorities said Avitan claimed to be in Malaysia to hunt down another Israeli citizen over a family dispute.
The two countries do not have diplomatic relations, and police investigated his motives and the possibility that he was part of an Israeli crime ring or a spy.
Avitan arrived from the United Arab Emirates on March 12 last year traveling on a French passport, officials said.
He was detained by police at a Kuala Lumpur hotel with the bag of weapons on March 27 and produced an Israeli passport when questioned, they added.
On Wednesday, the Kuala Lumpur sessions court accepted Avitan’s guilty plea and ordered his seven-year sentence to run from the date of his arrest on March 28 last year, his lawyer, Naran Singh, told Reuters.
Avitan will serve his sentence in the Kajang prison on the outskirts of the capital, the lawyer added.


France wants Europe cooperation on visas over expulsion of undocumented migrants

France wants Europe cooperation on visas over expulsion of undocumented migrants
Updated 26 February 2025
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France wants Europe cooperation on visas over expulsion of undocumented migrants

France wants Europe cooperation on visas over expulsion of undocumented migrants
  • European countries to cooperate and start cutting back visas available to nationals of countries that refuse to take back illegal migrants expelled by Paris

Paris: France’s foreign minister said Wednesday that he wanted “all” European countries to cooperate and start cutting back visas available to nationals of countries that refuse to take back illegal migrants expelled by Paris.
Jean-Noel Barrot spoke after an Algerian-born man went on a stabbing rampage in the eastern French city of Mulhouse at the weekend, killing one person and wounding several others in what President Emmanuel Macron called an “Islamist terrorist act.”
The 37-year-old suspect was on a terrorism watch list and subject to a deportation order.
France had attempted to expel him multiple times, but Algeria refused to cooperate, French authorities say.
“If a country does not cooperate with the French authorities, I will propose that all European countries restrict the issuing of visas at the same time,” Barrot told broadcaster France 2.
“When we do it on a national level, it doesn’t work unfortunately,” he added.
But if foreign governments cooperate, the European Union could consider reducing customs tariffs for such countries, Barrot proposed.
“It is a particularly powerful lever,” he said.
French authorities are seeking to tighten immigration policies and border controls, in a move emblematic of the right-ward shift in French politics.
“If we want our migration policy to be as effective as possible, there are many things that will be much more effective if we do it at a European level,” he said.
Prime Minister Francois Bayrou was set later Wednesday to chair a meeting on immigration controls.
Bayrou has called for a national debate on immigration and what it means to be French, suggesting that immigrants were “flooding” France.