teensexonline.com
38.7 C
Jammu
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
HomeFeatured StoriesSouth China sea on agenda of US, Philippines, Japan trilateral summit..

South China sea on agenda of US, Philippines, Japan trilateral summit..

Date:

Related stories

Forced Labor Casts Shadow Over China’s Global Infrastructure Push

The growing presence of Chinese companies in Latin America,...

US President Trump, Saudi Crown Prince sign $142 billion arms deal

US President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed...

India Hits Back at China Over ‘Renaming’ of Arunachal Pradesh Places

India has categorically rejected China’s continued, unfounded, and absurd...

Military chiefs brief President Murmu on Operation Sindoor

Chief of Defence Staff, General Anil Chauhan, along with...

A trilateral summit between the leaders of the United States, Japan, and the Philippines will include a discussion of recent incidents in the South China Sea, Manila’s foreign ministry said on Friday (April 5).

US President Joe Biden will host next week Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr to discuss economic relations and the Indo-Pacific.

The summit set for next week is not directed at any country, Philippines’ acting foreign affairs undersecretary Hans Mohaimin Siriban told a press conference, although the three countries have expressed concern about China’s growing aggressiveness in the region.

“We can expect an alignment of views among the three countries on the recent incidents,” Siriban said, adding they are expected to come up with a “joint vision statement” on their diplomatic relations.

Siriban said Biden and Marcos will separately hold a bilateral meeting ahead of the trilateral summit.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea as its territory, policed by an armada of coastguard vessels, some more than 1,000km (620 miles) away from its mainland.

The Philippines and China have had a series run-ins at sea and heated exchanges in the past year over disputed maritime features, including an incident last month where China used water cannon to disrupt a Philippine supply mission to soldiers stationed in a grounded warship in a South China Sea shoal.

Latest stories