The proposed 2016 national budget reserves a record P25 billion for defense spending
HAND-ME-DOWN. The Philippine Navy's most capable warship, BRP Ramon Alcaraz, is an excess defense article from the US Coast Guard. Rappler file photo Carmela Fonbuena/Rappler
The
The proposed 2016
national budget, which President Benigno Aquino III is to present to parliament
for approval on Monday, would reserve a record P25 billion (US$552 million) for
defense spending.
Funds would be
used to acquire navy frigates and patrol aircraft, budget and defense officials
told AFP.
"We need to
protect what is clearly within our territorial jurisdiction," Budget
Secretary Florencio Abad said when asked if the increase was due to the Philippines ' maritime row with China .
"Certainly,
we need to at least be able to effectively monitor the developments in the
area, particularly those in disputed zones," he added.
Under the
P3-trillion-peso budget bill, defense spending would be up from a P20-billion
military budget last year and five times bigger than in 2013, the officials
said.
The proposed 2016
defense budget is part of a five-year P75-billion military modernization
program approved by Aquino in 2013, Abad said.
The amount would
still be dwarfed by China ,
which claims most of the South China Sea
including areas close to the shores of its Asian neighbours.
Modernization
catch-up
One of the
region's most poorly equipped, the Philippine military relies on half-century
old ships and aircraft keeping watch over the South China
Sea , where tensions have flared recently.
The Philippines
is catching up on military modernization after spending was held back to just
five billion pesos in 2013 as the government shifted resources to recovery from
Super Typhoon Haiyan, which struck the country that year leaving 7,350 people
dead or missing.
The Philippine
military's mission to protect the country's territory is complicated by
long-running communist and Muslim insurgencies that forces it to devote troops
and equipment for internal security.
While China has gone on an island-building frenzy to
reinforce its claims on South China Sea reefs and waters, the Philippines has
set repairs on a crumbling World War II ship that serves as its lonely outpost
there.
The BRP Sierra
Madre, emblematic of the Philippine military, was deliberately grounded on
Second Thomas Shoal in 1995 in a desperate move to check China 's advance
in the Spratly islands.
The South China
Sea chain is also disputed in whole or in part by Brunei ,
Malaysia , Taiwan and Vietnam .
"This budget
will allow us more latitude in acquiring new assets for the Armed Forces of the
Philippines ,"
defense department spokesman Arsenio Andolong said.
"We are
pushing hard on modernization and we will need all the help we can get.... This
includes the purchase of frigates and patrol aircraft," Andolong added.
Two of 12 fighter
jets that the Philippines
had bought from South Korea
are expected to be delivered as early as November, he said.
A United
Nations-backed tribunal is expected to decide in months whether it has
jurisdiction over a Philippine petition to declare China 's claims as illegal.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/100021-philippines-defense-budget
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