Japan to fund defence projects of friendly nations

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Japan plans to offer friendly nations financial assistance to help bolster their defences, marking Tokyo’s first unambiguous departure from rules that forbid using international aid for military purposes.

Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said at a regular news conference that the Overseas Security Assistance (OSA) will be operated separately from the Overseas Development Assistance (ODA) program that for decades has funded roads, dams and other civilian infrastructure projects.

The aid will not be used to buy lethal weapons that recipient countries could use in conflicts with other nations in accordance with the three principles that govern arms exports, Matsuno added.

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The decision to expand the scope of international aid to military-related projects follows Japan’s announcement in December of a military build-up that will double defence spending within five years as it looks to counter China’s growing military might in Asia.

The first recipients of that security aid will likely be the Philippines, which wants radars to monitor Chinese activity in the contested South China Sea, along with Malaysia, Bangladesh and Fiji, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Monday.

 

Zainab Sa’id

Source Reuters
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