China says defence budget to rise
China will raise its heavily scrutinised defence spending by nearly a fifth this year, a top official said on Tuesday, warning self-ruled Taiwan that Beijing would "tolerate no division".
Jiang Enzhu, spokesman for China's National People's Congress, or parliament, stressed that China adhered to a path of peaceful development and said the money would be used to raise the pay of service personnel, improve training and upgrade military equipment.
"China pursues a national defence policy which is defensive in nature," Jiang told a news conference. "China's limited military capability is solely for the purpose of safeguarding independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, and will not pose a threat to any country."
The planned allocation for the People's Liberation Army for 2008 was 417.769 billion yuan (30 billion pounds), up 17.6 percent on 2007.
U.S. officials have said China's growing might is aimed at Taiwan, the island Beijing regards as its territory and whose March 22 presidential election it will watch closely.
Jiang called the situation in the Taiwan Strait "grim and complex" and said a plan by Taiwan leader Chen Shui-bian to hold a referendum on election day on whether to seek U.N. membership under the name "Taiwan" was tantamount to a poll on independence.
"China's sovereignty and territorial integrity tolerate no division," Jiang said.
"We are fully prepared to repulse any adventurous activities towards Taiwan independence and to prevent anyone from separating Taiwan from China under any name or by any means."
China has claimed sovereignty over Taiwan since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949. Beijing has vowed to bring the island back under mainland rule, by force if necessary.
The use of "Taiwan" - rather than "Republic of China", the island's official name - in Chen's latest campaign is viewed as particularly inflammatory by Beijing, which sees it as firming up pro-independence claims.
NUMBER GAMES?
This year's rise follows a 17.8 percent increase in defence spending for 2007, its largest rise in a decade, when the official outlay reached 350.92 billion yuan.
Jiang said that China's spending on defence was increasing at a much lower rate than the pace of increase in government revenues, and accounted for 1.4 percent of its GDP - less, he said, than that of the United States, Britain or India.
But international experts estimate China's true spending on the PLA could be as much as triple the stated figure.
On Monday, the Pentagon said China was developing weapons that would disable its enemies' space technology in a conflict and warned that the balance of forces in the Taiwan Strait continued to shift in China's favour.
Xu Guangyu, a former People's Liberation Army officer who now works in the China Arms Control and Disarmament Association, said the budget increase was needed and was no cause for alarm.
"This rise is absolutely ordinary and entirely necessary. We're starting from a very low base - only about a 12th of the United States' defence budget - so we need bigger increases to reach world standards," he told Reuters.
The Bush administration last month requested $515.4 billion (259 billion pounds) for the Pentagon in the next U.S. fiscal year, a figure that does not include extra spending for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"I'd guess that we will see similar rates of growth for the next five years at least. Weapons are becoming much more costly, too," Xu said. "So nobody should make a fuss about this increase."
(Additional reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Nick Macfie and Alex Richardson)
- 1 Recession fears as Asia joins bailout bonanza
- 2 Zimbabwe opposition says no deal yet
- 3 Security minister warns of big terrorist plot
- 4 Brown calls for second wave attack on crisis
- 5 Teleradiology paves way for remote medicine
- 6 U.S. brings Iraq prison camp out of black hole
- 7 Canada's Conservatives win stronger minority
|
|














GP pay bill 1.8 billion above budget


