source: Reuters through www.gmanetwork.com
TOKYO
- Japan is set to boost the number of military personnel, Defense Minister
Itsunori Onodera said on Sunday, as the new government led by the Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP) tackles a territorial spat with China over East China
Sea islets.
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe led the LDP to a landslide election victory last month,
promising to beef up the military and stand tough in the dispute over tiny,
uninhabited islands, called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.
The
number of personnel, now standing at about 225,000, will increase by 287 in the
next fiscal year starting in April, Onodera told reporters after meeting
Finance Minister Taro Aso for the final budgetary negotiations.
Onodera
said the increase was the biggest in two decades. The figure represents an
expansion of about 0.1 percent.
"This
would allow us to firmly reinforce our surveillance activities in the
southwest," Onodera said.
The
disputed islets are located to the southwest of Japan's main islands, where two
countries share a maritime border.
Both
China and Japan sought to cool down tensions in the row last week, with Chinese
Communist Party chief Xi Jinping telling an envoy from Abe that he was
committed to developing bilateral ties.
Onodera
also said that the defense budget will grow 40 billion yen ($440 million), or
about 0.8 percent, in the year from April, posting positive growth for the
first time in 11 years.
A
small budget rise had been expected as the LDP campaigned in December's lower
house election on pledges to boost defense spending. The Defense Ministry this
month requested an annual increase of about 100 billion yen in its budget. —
Reuters
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