City
Epaper

Philippines eases restrictions on Taiwan engagement amid rising tensions in China

By ANI | Updated: April 23, 2025 18:22 IST

Manila [Philippines], April 23 : In a significant foreign policy adjustment, the Philippines has eased longstanding restrictions on official ...

Open in App

Manila [Philippines], April 23 : In a significant foreign policy adjustment, the Philippines has eased longstanding restrictions on official interactions with Taiwan, marking what analysts view as a strategic pivot amid rising tensions with China, as reported by Radio Free Asia (RFA).

The revised policy, implemented on April 15, now permits most Philippine government officials to visit Taiwan for economic and trade missions, without needing special approval, as long as they use regular passports and refrain from using formal titles, the RFA reported.

This development reverses decades of strict rules that barred Philippine officials from travelling to Taiwan or engaging with Taiwanese counterparts without prior clearance. The change, detailed in a memorandum published by the state-run Official Gazette, is intended to "maximise opportunities for development" in key economic sectors, RFA cited.

Taiwan welcomed the shift, noting its position as the Philippines' ninth-largest trading partner. Taiwan's foreign ministry expressed optimism that this decision would bolster bilateral ties and expand practical cooperation between the two sides.

According to Radio Free Asia, J Michael Cole, a senior fellow at the Global Taiwan Institute in Taipei, interpreted Manila's move as a response to the evolving geopolitical climate. According to Cole, both Taiwan and the Philippines share common security concerns, particularly in light of China's increasing assertiveness in the region.

"Manila is recalibrating its China policy, recognising that deeper ties with Taipei could offer mutual benefits in the face of common threats," Cole stated.

In recent years, tensions in the South China Sea have escalated, with repeated confrontations between Philippine and Chinese vessels over disputed territories. Many of these areas lie within the Philippines' exclusive economic zone but are also claimed by Beijing. This backdrop of maritime friction has spurred Manila to seek new alliances and reinforce regional cooperation, with Taiwan emerging as a natural partner, RFA cited.

The policy shift reflects a broader strategy to assert Philippine sovereignty while diversifying its international partnerships amid the growing uncertainty in regional security dynamics.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalOver 8.4 lakh Indians returned from Gulf since February 28, says MEA; Airspace disruptions continue across region

InternationalTrump to Vance: "I wish them luck," says US will open Hormuz "with or without" Iran

InternationalIndia engages Bahrain, GCC on stability and supply chains; Piyush Goyal holds virtual talks

InternationalArtemis II crew set for splashdown after historic lunar flyby

InternationalIranian delegation led by Parliament Speaker Qalibaf arrives in Islamabad for talks with US

International Realted Stories

InternationalEAM Jaishankar hands over 90 electric buses to Mauritius PM, highlights "green partnership"

InternationalIndian Ocean must prepare for turbulent world, deepen cooperation: EAM outlines 5 priorities at 9th IOC

InternationalTrump warns of US strike on Iran with "best weapons" if talks fail

International'Only expert status, no right to conduct technical review': UK regulator responds to families over Air India crash probe

InternationalNeighbourhood First policy: India, Mauritius deepen ties during EAM Jaishankar’s visit