Philippines, China vow post-pandemic recovery cooperation

Philippine Foreign Affairs secretary Teodoro Locsin (left) and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi committed to prioritising post-pandemic recovery efforts. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

MANILA • The foreign ministers of China and the Philippines yesterday committed to prioritising post-pandemic recovery efforts as senior Chinese diplomat Wang Yi wrapped up a week-long visit to four South-east Asian countries.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte in March imposed one of the world's longest and strictest lockdowns to contain the spread of the virus, grounding to a halt what was one of Asia's fastest growing economies before the pandemic.

"As a friend of the Philippines and your closest neighbour, we will firmly stand with the people of the Philippines until the defeat of this virus," Mr Wang said in his opening remarks at a meeting with Philippine Foreign Minister Teodoro Locsin.

The two countries should cooperate on the response to the pandemic for mutual benefit, Mr Wang added.

With nearly 499,000 cases and almost 9,900 deaths as of yesterday, the Philippines has the second-highest Covid-19 infections and casualties in South-east Asia, after Indonesia.

But Manila has trailed regional peers in securing vaccines.

Mr Locsin said close cooperation to beat the pandemic enhanced ties and deepened the friendship between the two nations, adding that collaborative work on economic and infrastructure projects had resumed.

Since taking office in 2016, Mr Duterte has pursued warmer ties with China, setting aside a territorial spat in exchange for pledges of aid, loans and grants.

Manila is buying 25 million doses of Sinovac Biotech's experimental Covid-19 vaccine, with the first 50,000 expected to arrive next month.

However, Philippine senators have questioned the government's preference for the Chinese Covid-19 vaccine after the latest data showed it has a lower efficacy rate, saying this would not bode well for a country seeking to boost confidence in vaccines.

Still, Mr Duterte prefers to source its Covid-19 vaccines from either China or Russia.

The Philippines' Foreign Ministry said China intends to donate 500,000 doses of Covid-19 vaccines to the Philippines, but did not mention which vaccine.

Officials of the two countries yesterday signed an agreement for a 500 million yuan (S$104 million) grant from China to fund the Philippines' livelihood, infrastructure and other projects.

It was the seventh grant from China to the country since 2016, bringing cumulative grants to 3.25 billion yuan.

Mr Wang, the Chinese government's top diplomat, earlier in the week visited Myanmar, Indonesia and Brunei.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Sunday Times on January 17, 2021, with the headline Philippines, China vow post-pandemic recovery cooperation. Subscribe