Japan to step up help for Vietnamese maritime security
TOKYO — Japan announced Tuesday it will give Vietnam used boats and other equipment worth 200 million yen ($1.7 million) to improve its maritime security capabilities as China asserts its territorial claims in regional seas.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced the grant after holding talks with Vietnamese Communist Party chief Nguyen Phu Trong in Tokyo.
The two leaders said they share "serious concerns" over attempts by China to change the status quo in the South China Sea by asserting its territorial claims.
"The massive land reclamation work and construction of outposts" intensify tensions, Abe said, without identifying China by name. China has recently created new islands by piling large amounts of sand on disputed islets and outcroppings it controls.
The number of boats Japan will provide wasn't announced. Japan earlier pledged to provide six used ships to Vietnam for law enforcement operations. Two were delivered by August and the other four are to be delivered by December, according to the Foreign Ministry.
Tokyo, which also has territorial disputes with China, has stepped up security cooperation with several Southeast Asian nations.
Abe's government is pushing for the approval of a set of highly contentious security laws by the end of this week that would expand the role of Japan's military. They could allow patrols by Japanese military ships in the South China Sea in the future.
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