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Philippine Senators ’could reject’ Japan free trade deal

Protesters are engulf by smoke coming from burning incense which they used during a rally Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2007 in suburban Quezon City, north of Manila, supposedly to drive away bad spirits working for the ratification of the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement. The protesters, mostly fishermen, claimed that with the said treaty Japan will be fishing in Philippine waters for tuna fish thru the entry of big Japanese fishing vessels that will deplete the fishing ground for small fishermen. (AP Photo/Pat Roque)

Agence France-Presse | 2 October 2007

Philippine Senators ’could reject’ Japan free trade deal

MANILA (AFP) — Philippine lawmakers are unlikely to ratify a free trade agreement with Japan in the deal’s present form, the president of the Southeast Asian nation’s Senate said Tuesday.

Officials have been unable to convince the legislators that the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement would be beneficial to the Philippines, said Manuel Villar.

The agreement, signed in September last year, would remove import tariffs on more than 90 percent of goods traded between the two Asian countries and open the largely closed Japanese labour market to Filipino health workers.

But the Philippine Senate must ratify the agreement for it to become effective, which legislators have yet to do amid claims that the deal favours Japan.

President Gloria Arroyo has described the agreement as an economic priority.

"Personally I’m not impressed with the so-called economic benefits," Villar, seen as a likely candidate in the May 2010 presidential election, told reporters.

Nevertheless, he said he had an open mind and could still be convinced of the deal’s merits, although he favours the renegotiation of the agreement.

Environmental groups have campaigned against the treaty allegedly because it would allow Tokyo to dump hazardous waste in the Philippines disguised as exports.

Villar said the activists "are better at presenting their case."

The free trade agreement is one of a raft of bilateral or regional deals being negotiated or signed by Asian countries amid a breakdown in the Doha round of the World Trade Organisation trade talks.

Apart from his reservations over the trade deal with Japan, Villar said he thought the Philippines was "doing well" economically.

"We know we’re on the verge of a takeoff," he said, adding an Asian boom rather than Arroyo’s leadership was mostly responsible for that.


 source: AFP