David Cameron: "We need to get our economy moving"
David Cameron has met Japanese PM
Yoshihiko Noda for talks in Tokyo, as he attempts to boost UK trade with East
and South East Asia.
The UK prime minister is on a week-long visit to the region and is expected
to agree a new defence deal with Japan.
He said it was part of his job to "load up an aeroplane full of business
people" to "fly the flag for Britain".
On a visit to Nissan's headquarters in Yokohama, he welcomed news that its
new hatchback is to be built in Sunderland.
The prime minister is expected to agree a new defence
deal with Japan which would see both countries develop weapons together for the
first time.
Mr Cameron told reporters on the flight to Japan he was "completely upfront"
about including several large defence contractors among his 40-strong business
delegation and hailed the UK's "very strong defence sector".
"We have some of the toughest rules on defence exports anywhere in the
world," he said.
"But as these countries, particularly Japan, that have tended in the past to
buy only American equipment are opening up, there are opportunities for people
like AgustaWestland, who make helicopters, who are on this plane.
"I think that's perfectly responsible and respectable."
Postponed visit
He said he wanted to boost and strengthen diplomatic relationships with
countries in the region.
Mr Cameron met his Japanese
counterpart Yoshihiko Noda for talks in Tokyo
"All these countries represent huge opportunities. Part of the job of the prime minister is to load up an aeroplane full of
business people, large and small, get our exports up, get our investment up, get
out there and fly the flag for Britain."
Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt, Science Minister David Willetts, Chief
Scientist Sir John Beddington and representatives from BAE Systems, the Nuclear
Industry Association and Rolls Royce are among the delegates taking part in the
trade visit.
The government has said that when the prime minister embarks on foreign
business trips, exports rise by 20% in the countries he visits.
Mr Cameron, whose planned trip to Japan last year was postponed because of
the eurozone crisis, also met Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda for discussions
about a variety of issues including the global economy and British expertise on
nuclear decommissioning following the Japanese earthquake and tsunami which led
to the Fukushima nuclear disaster last year.
Rocket
launch 'unacceptable'
Speaking after the talks, the prime minister also warned North Korea not to
defy calls for it to abandon a rocket launch planned for later this week.
Officials in Pyongyang have said concerns that the launch is a cover for
developing missile technology are "nonsense" and say it is part of the peaceful
development of a space programme.
But Mr Cameron told TV station News Zero it would be "unacceptable" to go
ahead with the launch: "If they go ahead it should be condemned in the strongest
possible terms by the UN Security Council."
He added: "We need to explain that they need to take a different path. They
need to do less in terms of weapons and the military and more engagement with
the rest of the world."
Mr Cameron, who also met Emperor Akihito at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo,
visited Nissan's head office in Yokohama, along with the company's chief
operating officer Toshiyuki Shiga.
Nissan has announced it is to build a new hatchback at its UK plant in
Sunderland in 2014, boosting jobs at the plant and component companies supplying
it. The prime minister said that was "a huge vote of confidence in the skills
and flexibility of the UK workforce" and he hoped to attract more
investment.
The government is encouraging overseas companies with a variety of incentives
to invest in the UK, such as the regional growth fund.
It hopes to reach deals on more than £200m worth of Japanese investment in
the UK.
Other announcements expected during the trip include Panasonic choosing to
set up a fuel research centre in Cardiff and Mitsubishi using Edinburgh as a
base for a project on wind turbine generators.
Mr Cameron is expected to visit Burma later this week - the first Western
leader to do so since the country's landmark by-elections on 1 April.