President Aquino delivers his speech during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) Small and Medium Enterprises (SME) Summit 2015 at The Green Sun Arts/ Creative Hub in Makati City on Tuesday. The Apec SME Summit 2015 will bring together the region’s micro-, small- and medium-sized business entrepreneurs to share success stories of SME innovation and internationalization, as well as to highlight institutional support mechanisms proven to drive innovation-based SME growth. More Apec photos on A4. Robert Viñas / Malacañang Photo Bureau
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Apec ministers OK crafting of plan to hike services exports By Cai U. Ordinario & Bianca Cuaresma
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inisters of countries belonging to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) on Tuesday said they have approved the crafting of a 10-year road map in 2016 to boost revenues from services exports.
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Apec ministers issued a joint statement, where they endorsed the Apec Services Cooperation Framework (ASCF), which will promote reforms in Asia Pacific’s services sector. The statement was issued following the conclusion of the 27th Apec Ministerial Meeting (AMM)
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in Manila on Tuesday. “The ASCF will develop [the] Apec Services Competitiveness Road Map to improve trade and investment in services over the next 10 years,” Foreign Secretary Albert F. del Rosario told reporters in a media briefing. Continued on A2
PHL, Japan to ink two defense deals P
By Recto Mercene
resident Aquino and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will meet on Thursday, during which they will sign two major agreements—one on the provision of defense equipment and the other on funding the North-South Railway Project (NSRP). “It has been agreed in June during President Aquino’s visit there and, hopefully, it would be signed,” Koichi Mizushima, deputy director general for press and public diplomacy, said at a briefing with members of the media on Tuesday morning. Mizushima would not release details to the defense agreement, but said its outcome and other details might be announced at the meeting of the two leaders on Thursday.
Mizushima said the two countries have agreed that the Philippines is not allowed to transfer the technology to other neighboring countries. Due to China’s large-scale reclamation activities in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea), the Philippines signed with Japan in June a joint declaration enhancing the two countries’ strategic partnership. They agreed to exchange defense materiel, undertake joint-training exercises, and ensure “maritime safety and security in the disputed South China Sea.” Mizushima said that, while Abe announced the total Japanese official development assistance (ODA) loans for Asia already increased by 50 percent, the Philippines could not use its share of the loan to pay for the See “Defense deals,” A2
‘Manila must be more open to change’ By Lorenz S. Marasigan
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OREGONE revenues from the virtually untapped Philippine tourism market is one of the culprits behind the deceleration of local output growth, or the GDP, according to AirAsia CEO Anthony
Fernandes. Should the government be more open to developing the nation’s aviation infrastructure, the unmet potential should eventually be realized. Fernandes said the Philippine tourism industry has a huge potential that can be developed through an overall
PESO exchange rates n US 47.0320
APEC LEADERS CONDEMN PARIS ATTACKS IN PLANNED STATEMENT
tourism and infrastructure policy, a doable plan that the aviation mogul said could be done with ease. The Philippines, as a preferred destination, could easily be the shining light of tourism in the AsiaPacific region if the government and
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(Clockwise, from top left) US President Barack Obama, Chinese President Xi Jinping, South Korean President Park Geun-hye and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull arrive at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (Naia) for the Apec summit. (Below) Air Force One, with its US Marines helicopter escorts, sits on the Naia tarmac.
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eaders at a regional summit in the Philippines plan to condemn the Paris attacks, according to a draft of their declaration seen on Tuesday by the Associated Press. The 21-member Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) forum is focused on trade and economic issues, but has struggled to keep its annual gathering from being overshadowed by security and geopolitical concerns. The meeting of world leaders, including President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, is being held in Manila in the wake of the deadly Paris attacks and US
military maneuvers near artificial Chinese islands in the contested West Philippine Sea (South China Sea). Apec leaders said in the draft statement that the events in France “demand a united voice from the global community.” The attacks on Friday by suspected Islamic State group extremists killed 129 people and wounded 350 others. The victims came from at least 19 nations, according to French President François Hollande. “We stand in solidarity with the people of France and all victims of terrorism elsewhere,” the draft statement said. “Terrorism threatens our
vision of free, open and prosperous economies, and the fundamental values that we hold.” There was no mention in the communiqué of China’s territorial disputes in the South China Sea with its Asian neighbors, but that’s unlikely to stop the rifts from bursting through Apec’s façade of handshakes and unity photo-ops. The US military maneuvers in the past month involving ships and B-52 bombers were intended to underline that the US won’t allow freedom of navigation to be compromised by China’s vast claim to the disputed See “Apec leaders,” A2
Continued on A2
n japan 0.3835 n UK 71.6438 n HK 6.0679 n CHINA 7.3787 n singapore 33.0327 n australia 33.4771 n EU 50.5688 n SAUDI arabia 12.5416
Source: BSP (16 November 2015)