Showing posts with label Spratly Islands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spratly Islands. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

China 'will not use force' in sea disputes

Map showing the disputed Paracel and Spratly islands in the South China Sea. China has pledged not to resort to the use of force in the tense South China Sea, as neighbours with rival border claims stepped up their complaints over Beijing's assertive maritime posture
China on Tuesday pledged not to resort to the use of force in the tense South China Sea, as neighbours with rival border claims stepped up their complaints over Beijing's assertive maritime posture.
Beijing called for more dialogue to resolve the long-standing territorial disputes in the area after the Philippines sought help from the United States and Vietnam staged live-fire military exercises in a show of military strength.
"We will not resort to the use of force or the threat of force," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters.
"We hope relevant countries will do more for peace and stability in the region."
Tensions between China and other rival claimants to the strategically vital South China Sea -- home to two potentially oil-rich archipelagos, the Paracels and Spratlys -- have escalated in recent weeks.
The Philippines and Vietnam in particular have expressed alarm at what they say are increasingly aggressive actions by China in the disputed waters, but Beijing has insisted it is committed to resolving the issue peacefully.
In Manila, Philippine President Benigno Aquino said Tuesday his country needed help from longtime ally the United States in the increasingly tense maritime dispute.
"Of course they (China) are a superpower, they have more than 10 times our population. We do not want any hostilities to break out," Aquino told reporters when asked about recent Chinese actions in the disputed waters.
"Perhaps the presence of our treaty partners, the United States of America, ensures that all of us will have freedom of navigation (and) will conform to international law."
The Philippines has accused China of undermining peace and stability in the region by sending naval vessels to intimidate Filipino fishermen and the crew of an oil exploration ship.
China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Taiwan, Brunei and Malaysia have competing claims to the Spratlys. Beijing and Hanoi are at odds over the Paracels.
The area has commercial shipping lanes that are vital for global trade.
Hong insisted Vietnam was to blame for the recent flare-up in the spat between Beijing and Hanoi, sparked by a confrontation last month between Chinese surveillance vessels and a Vietnamese oil survey ship.
"Some country took unilateral actions to impair China's sovereignty and maritime rights and interests, and released groundless and irresponsible remarks with the attempt to expand and complicate the issue of the South China Seas," Hong said, in a thinly veiled reference to Hanoi.
"This is where the problem lies."
He said China was willing to hold direct negotiations with the other nations making territorial claims within the framework of a code of conduct agreed to in 2002.
Hong also urged nations not directly involved in the maritime disputes to "respect" the efforts of disputing nations to peacefully resolve the issue -- perhaps a warning to Washington.
On Monday, US Senator Jim Webb urged Congress to condemn China's recent behaviour, saying that Washington has been too weak-kneed on the South China Sea issue.
Webb, who heads the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on East Asia, said he was introducing a bill that would denounce China for the use of force and urge it to seek a peaceful resolution to disputes.
The United States generally does not take positions on territorial disputes in which it is not directly involved.
A Chinese military newspaper stated Beijing's position more bluntly.
"China resolutely opposes any country unrelated to the South China Sea issue meddling in disputes, and it opposes the internationalisation of the South China Sea issue," the People's Liberation Army Daily said Tuesday in a commentary.
"This dispute must be resolved peacefully through friendly consultations between the two parties involved."
Taiwan at the weekend reiterated its claim to the Spratlys, and said missile boats and tanks could be deployed to disputed territory.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Envoy assures US supports Phl on Spratly dispute

MANILA, Philippines - The United States today assured that it will give full support to the Philippines as tension escalates in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea).
"I assure you and all subjects, we the United States, are with the Philippines. The Philippines and the United States are strategic treaty allies. We are partners. We will continue to consult and work with each other on all issues including the South China Sea and Spratlys Islands,” US Ambassador to Manila Harry Thomas said in his speech in today's launching of the Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Program.
President Benigno Aquino III led the launching of the program in Makati City.
Thomas's assurance came following Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa Jr.'s announcement that the Philippines may invoke its Mutual Defense Treaty with the US to reduce tension with China over the dispute in Spratly Islands.
“The relevant portion of that treaty is that the US has been our ally and they will come, and we expect na talagang kasama natin sila (they are with us) in any problem that will require their help,” Ochoa said.
“It’s a diplomatic problem, it’s a political and diplomatic issue, so we will solve it along those lines,” he said. “We don’t want to encourage anything that will exacerbate the issues there.”
Meanwhile, Ochoa called for caution in handling the conflict, emphasizing that the issues involve international law and are being addressed diplomatically.
The Philippines has protested several incidents involving China in the disputed territory, including the harassment of a Philippine-owned vessel by two Chinese Navy gunboats in the vicinity of Recto (Reed) Bank, 250 kilometers west of Palawan last March.
US senator urges Washington to act
A US senator, meanwhile, urged Washington to condemn China's alleged use of force and push for multilateral negotiations to resolve territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
Amid tensions between China and the Philippines, Vietnam fired live artillery rounds Monday off its central coast in naval drills staged after alleging that Chinese boats disrupted oil and gas exploration.
The United States irked China last year by asserting that Washington had a national security interest in the peaceful resolution of disputes in the South China Sea, resource-rich waters where China has competing claims with several nations and territories and rejects outside interference. It maintains that the disputes should be handled bilaterally.
Senator Jim Webb, a Democrat who chairs the Senate subcommittee overseeing American policy toward east Asia, said Vietnam and other countries were watching whether "we are going to back up those words with substantive action."
"That does not mean military confrontation, per se, but we have to make a clear signal," he told a Washington seminar organized by the Council on Foreign Relations.
Webb and Sen. James Inhofe, ranking Republican on the subcommittee, introduced a Senate resolution condemning China's actions. It supports continued operations by US forces to defend freedom of navigation in the South China Sea and urges the United States to facilitate a multilateral process to settle the territorial disputes.
The US diplomatic intervention last year was welcomed by countries in the region, most notably Vietnam, which has a historic rivalry with China, against which it fought a bloody border war in 1979.
The latest spat between the communist-led countries has prompted rare protests in Vietnam, which says Chinese boats cut a cable attached to a vessel conducting a seismic survey off its coast May 26 and hindered operations of another vessel June 9. For its part, China accuses Vietnam of illegally entering its waters and putting fishermen's lives at risk. It has not commented on Vietnam's naval drills.
Webb described China's actions as a clear interference in "proper activities by Vietnam."
US State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Friday that the recent incidents in the South China Sea had raised concerns about maritime security. He urged a collaborative diplomatic process to resolve the territorial disputes, saying that shows of force only served to raise tensions further. (With AP)

Monday, June 13, 2011

Vietnam to hold live-fire drill amid China dispute

A PetroTimes photo from June 9, 2011, shows a Chinese marine surveillance ship sailing some 120 nautic miles off the Vietnamese coast. PetroVietnam has accused the Chinese patrol ships of damaging some equipment of a Vietnamese oil and gas survey ship operating in the area on that day
Vietnam is set to hold live-fire naval drills on Monday in the South China Sea, as tensions with Beijing reach their highest levels in years over an escalating maritime dispute.
The neighbouring nations are at loggerheads over sovereignty of the potentially oil-rich Paracel and Spratly archipelagos and surrounding waters, where recent confrontations between their ships have sparked a war of words.
A Vietnamese naval officer told AFP that the six hours of live-fire exercises would be held around Hon Ong island, about 40 kilometres (25 miles) off Quang Nam province in central Vietnam.
The officer declined to give the reason for the night drill or say how many vessels would be involved, but foreign ministry spokeswoman Nguyen Phuong Nga said the exercises were part of routine annual training.
The drills will be held in the area claimed as Vietnam's exclusive economic zone, where Hanoi last month accused Chinese surveillance vessels of cutting the exploration cables of an oil survey ship, causing tensions to rise sharply.
On Thursday Vietnam alleged a similar incident in the zone, saying a Chinese fishing boat rammed the cables of another oil survey ship in its waters, describing it as a "premeditated" attack.
Beijing countered by warning Vietnam to halt all activities that it says violate China's sovereignty in the disputed area.
The United States said it was "troubled" by tensions triggered by the maritime border dispute, calling for a "peaceful resolution".
The area where the live-fire exercise is planned is about 250 kilometres from the Paracels and almost 1,000 kms from the Spratlys.
Carl Thayer, a veteran analyst of Vietnam and the South China Sea, said that the drill would be a way for Vietnam to send a message, after China a day earlier also said it would conduct naval exercises.
Thayer said Vietnam was firing "a soft warning shot across the bow, rather than a real one."
But he added such drills were not unprecedented because Vietnam held an air-defence drill on land about two months ago.
Beijing says it is committed to peace in the South China Sea, but its more assertive maritime posture has caused concern among regional nations and beyond.
Tensions have also risen this year between China and the Philippines, another claimant to the Spratlys, where Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also say they have a stake.
In Vietnam, where protests are rarely held, hundreds of citizens in southern Ho Chi Minh City and in Hanoi held anti-China rallies on Sunday, bearing signs proclaiming Vietnamese sovereignty over the disputed archipelagos.
Vietnamese bitterly recall 1,000 years of Chinese occupation and, more recently, a 1979 border war. More than 70 Vietnamese sailors were killed in 1988 when the two sides had a battle off the Spratlys.

US not coming to Philippines' aid vs China

U.S. not coming to PH's aid against China

Manila (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) - The United States has said it will not side with any party in the Spratlys conflict, which is to say that the Philippines' most powerful ally will not be coming to its aid should its spat with China escalate into a shooting war.
The US Embassy made this clear in reaction to a Malacanang (the presidential palace) statement expressing confidence that Washington would honour its commitment under the two countries' Mutual Defence Treaty (MDT) to come to the aid of a beleaguered ally.
"The US does not take sides in regional territorial disputes," the US press attache Rebecca Thompson said in an e-mailed statement when contacted for comment to deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte's invoking of the 60-year-old MDT.
Thompson said the US was "troubled by incidents in the South China Sea in recent days that have raised tensions in the region" and that Washington opposes "the use or threat of force" by any of the countries with rival claims to the Spratly islands.
The brief statement said the US "shares a number of national interests with the international community in the South China Sea" but did not mention the Philippines or the two countries' over-a-hundred-year-old ties and mutual defence pact.
In an interview on state-run dzRB radio earlier on Saturday, Valte figured the Philippines could count on its superpower ally should the situation with China deteriorate because of the MDT.
"I haven't seen the terms of the MDT quite recently but I know that as an ally, the United States will help if ever it reaches that point because of the Mutual Defence Treaty," she said.
"Hopefully, it doesn't get to that point because, again, we are committed to the resolution of the issue in the most diplomatic and the most peaceful way possible," she added.
Armed Forces Chief General Eduardo Oban was also earlier quoted as saying that the military remained "hopeful that the Americans will not stand aside should the conflict erupt and that they can invoke the MDT with the US".
The MDT was signed on Aug 13, 1951, in Washington, DC with both parties declaring "publicly and formally their sense of unity and their common determination to defend themselves against external armed attack".
Under the eight articles of the treaty, both parties agree to aid and support each other in settling any international disputes by peaceful means, among others.
Sentor Francis Escudero said the Department of Foreign Affairs should be designated as the lead agency to talk about the Spratlys issue in public.
Avoid any mistakes
He said Malacanang should not do so through its spokespersons "in order to avoid any faux pas on our part".
Escudero said the government should also review the MDT to ascertain if US forces would indeed come to the rescue if the Philippines is attacked because of the Spratlys dispute.
He said Palace officials should carefully review the MDT, read through its fine print and get confirmations from the US government "if indeed this situation is covered".
But he remained optimistic that US military support would be given in case of an armed conflict as "a gesture of longstanding friendship".
Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. said the House would leave it to the Department of Foreign Affairs assert the country's sovereignty claim over the West Philippine Sea.
"The DFA is articulating our position and we're supporting it," he said.
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) spokesperson Commodore Miguel Rodriguez said the AFP leaves it to the DFA to make an official comment on the developments in the Spratlys issue.
Not joining Viet Nam
"We submit our reports to the DFA and the DFA crafts the country's position on KIG [Kalayaan Island Group] affairs," he said, referring to the portion of the Spratlys claimed by the Philippines.
He also said the military was not joining Viet Nam, another Spratlys claimant, in the deepening rift with China over the issue.
"We are not looking at partnering with one country against another country," he said.
At a Federation of Filipino-Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry Independence Day dinner Saturday night, President Aquino came face to face with Chinese Ambassador Liu Jiangchao who only a few days ago had warned claimant states to stop exploring for oil in the Spratlys.
"Like all neighbours, I know we may have our disagreements sometimes," Aquino said in his speech, acknowledging Liu's presence.
"(But) no one can deny the benefits our relationship has brought to both our countries throughout the years," he added.
Liu adverted to "incidents" that have arisen between the two countries since Aquino came to power.
"But facts have manifested we are stronger than these tests," he said.
Liu said the August 23 botched hostage crisis involving Hong Kong tourists had been settled with a "loving and understanding heart".
"The last thing the Chinese government and people want to see is that the [Spratlys] dispute stands in the way of the progress of our wonderful relations and the friendship and brotherhood of our two peoples," Liu said, who hinted at a visit to China from Aquino later this year.
In the past two weeks, the Philippines has accused China of making at least six incursions into Philippine territory in the past four months, a charge that Beijing has dismissed as rumors.
Recently, the Aquino government has made a point of referring to the South China Sea as the West Philippine Sea to bolster its claim to certain parts of the Spratlys. With reports from Christian V. Esguerra, DJ Yap and Cynthia D. Balana

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Philippines names disputed Spratly areas 'West Philippine Sea'

Manila (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) - The Philippine government has apparently made it settled doctrine to use "West Philippine Sea" to refer to the waters west of the country where the Philippines has overlapping territorial claims with five other nations, instead of the all-embracing tag of "South China Sea".
Tellingly, Malacanang (the presidential palace) Friday (June 10) used "West Philippine Sea" for the first time in a statement reacting to China's warning on Thursday (June 9), issued through Ambassador Liu Jianchao, to rival claimants to the disputed Spratlys island group to stop searching for oil in the contested region without permission from China.
"The Republic of the Philippines has stated its position on the various territorial issues in the West Philippine Sea. We are committed to hold dialogue with other claimants," presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda told a news briefing.
"We call on all parties to refrain from inflammatory statements that would make it more difficult to reach a mutually agreeable solution," he said.
In the past two weeks, the Philippines has publicly accused Chinese forces of being behind seven confrontations with Filipinos in the Spratlys in less than four months.
However, Liu said the reported incidents were mere "rumours" or exaggeration, even as he asserted China's claim to the reputedly oil-rich Spratlys island chain.
The islands are claimed in whole or in part by Brunei, China, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Viet Nam.
Based on history
Lacierda said the Palace was taking its cue from the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) which has been using "West Philippine Sea" in the series of letters and notes verbales protesting China's incursions into areas that the DFA claims were well within Philippine territory.
The DFA earlier explained that using "West Philippine Sea" to refer to the waters where the disputed territories lie was "in keeping with our tradition and history as well as reflective of its proper geographic location".
The same waters "have long been called Dagat Luzon, or Luzon Sea by our fisherfolk and the rest of our people, and referred to as such in published maps since time immemorial after the major Philippine island of Luzon", DFA spokesperson Eduardo Malaya explained earlier.
"On the other hand, South China Sea in Chinese is simply South Sea, while for the Vietnamese it is East Sea," he said.
Akbayan party-list member Walden Bello has filed House Resolution No 1350 proposing to officially name the region the "West Philippine Sea" to "strengthen [the Philippines'] claim to these controversial waters and the natural resources found within".
Subliminal message
On Friday, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) weighed in, saying it has deliberately been using West Philippine Sea to refer to the area.
"What's in a name, but when people keep saying that it is the South China Sea, there is a subliminal message that this is indeed a sea belonging to a country whose name appears in the name," said Commodore Miguel Jose Rodriguez, the AFP deputy chief of staff for civil military operations who is also the military spokesperson.
'Kalayaan Sea'
"Viet Nam calls it their East Sea and China calls it their South Sea. We in the Philippines should call it West Philippine Sea," he said.
Rodriguez (Philippine Military Academy Class of 1980) recalled that at the PMA, they were taught to refer to the area as "Kalayaan Sea" based on a newly issued presidential decree at the time naming the area claimed by the Philippines as the Kalayaan island group, or the "Luzon Sea" or "West Palawan Sea".
The United States on Friday called on the Asian countries fighting for control of the Spratlys to resolve the issue peacefully.
"As Ambassador Harry Thomas, (Defence) Secretary (Robert) Gates and other US officials have said, we urge all claimants to exercise restraint in dealing with competing claims in the South China Sea. These issues need to be resolved peacefully within the framework of international law," said Rebecca Thompson, US Embassy press attache, in a statement apparently issued in response to Liu's warning.
Rules-based approach
The DFA on Friday reiterated the Philippines' rules-based approach to ending the dispute.
It has proposed the concept of a Zone of Peace, Freedom, Friendship and Cooperation in which disputed territories could be recognised from undisputed areas as provided under international law.
"The Philippines has offered a specific framework for the resolution of differences and the pursuit of cooperation in the form of the ZOPFFC," said Malaya.
In the ZOPFFC, the disputed islands could be "enclaved" by segregating them and adjacent waters from the rest of the waters of the South China Sea.
The DFA has said the enclaved area could be designated as a Joint Cooperation Area where joint activities could be conducted, such as marine scientific research, search and rescue operations, oil spill preparedness and conservation projects.
Defence posture
AFP Chief General Eduardo Oban Jr. said the military is careful to "avoid any miscalculation" that would provoke open hostilities in the Spratlys.
Speaking at the Manila Overseas Press Club forum on Thursday, Oban said the military has been keeping an "active defence posture" following China's incursions this year into Philippine territory.
"If a Chinese vessel or any foreign vessel becomes hostile to us to the point of shooting at our own people, then we have to shoot back. We try to avoid that," said Oban, a former Air Force fighter pilot.
Presence as deterrence
"We just hope they won't (make further incursions). We will maintain our presence as a deterrent to incursions," he said.
While there have been six incursions from China, the military also recorded "some" incursions from Viet Nam, he said.
Oban said the Philippines' diplomatic protests against the Chinese incursions were backed by reports from military field units.
Despite the ongoing spat with China, Oban does not consider the tensions serious.
"I give a low rating (between 1 to 10) in terms of the seriousness based on the incursions because of the statements made by [Chinese Defence Minister] General Liang Guanglie. That's quite reassuring, (that) they're open for a peaceful resolution of the conflict," he said.With reports from Jerry E. Esplanada and Julie M. Aurelio
COPYRIGHT: ASIA NEWS NETWORK

Vietnam to hold live-fire drill as China rift grows

Vietnamese sailors walk from a ship which has just arrived at Truong Sa Dong island in the Spratly archipelargo. Vietnam will hold a live-fire drill in the South China Sea next week, the navy announced on Friday, as a maritime dispute fuels tensions with China
Vietnam announced Friday that it would hold a live-fire naval drill next week in the South China Sea as an escalating maritime dispute fuels tensions with Beijing.
Relations between China and Vietnam are at their worst in years as the two countries trade accusations over recent confrontations between their ships in potentially energy-rich contested waters.
The United States said it was "troubled" by tensions triggered by the maritime border dispute, calling for a "peaceful resolution".
A Vietnamese naval officer told AFP that the six hours of live-fire exercises would be held on Monday around Hon Ong island, about 40 kilometres (25 miles) off Quang Nam province in central Vietnam.
The officer declined to give the reason for the night drill or say how many vessels would be involved.
Foreign ministry spokeswoman Nguyen Phuong Nga said the exercises were part of routine annual training.
Tensions between the communist neighbours have risen sharply after Hanoi accused Chinese marine surveillance vessels of cutting the exploration cables of an oil survey ship in May inside its exclusive economic zone, where the drill will be.
On Thursday Vietnam alleged a similar incident in the zone, saying a Chinese fishing boat rammed the cables of another oil survey ship in its waters, describing it as a "premeditated" attack.
Beijing countered by warning Vietnam to halt all activities that it says violate its sovereignty in disputed South China Sea waters.
The two countries have long-standing disputes over the potentially oil-rich Paracel and Spratly archipelagos and surrounding sea.
The area where the live-fire exercise is planned is about 250 kilometres from the Paracels and almost 1,000 kms from the Spratlys.
Carl Thayer, a veteran analyst of Vietnam and the South China Sea, said the drill would be a way for Vietnam to send a message, after China on Thursday also said it would conduct naval exercises.
Thayer said Vietnam was firing "a soft warning shot across the bow, rather than a real one."
But he added such drills were not unprecedented as Vietnam held an air-defence drill on land about two months ago.
In a sign of how seriously Hanoi views the situation, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung this week vowed to protect Vietnam's "incontestable" sovereignty of the Paracels and Spratlys.
Vietnam said it has since deployed eight boats to "escort" the ship involved in the May incident, without saying what kind of vessels. Analysts say the move raises the stakes in the dispute.
Beijing says it is committed to peace in the South China Sea, but its more assertive maritime posture has caused concern among regional nations.
Tensions have also risen this year between China and the Philippines, another claimant to the Spratlys, where Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also say they have a stake.
"Nobody wants war but when there is an escalation we will act," vice defence minister Lieutenant General Nguyen Chi Vinh told local media earlier this week.
US State Department spokesman Mark Toner on Friday said: "We've been troubled by some of these reports about the South China Sea and believe they only serve to raise tensions and don't help peace and security in the region," "We support a collaborative diplomatic process... and call on all claimants to conform all the claims, both land and maritime, to international law."
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates warned last weekend that clashes may erupt in the South China Sea unless nations with conflicting territorial claims adopt a mechanism to settle disputes peacefully.
Hundreds of people held a peaceful anti-China protest outside Beijing's embassy in Hanoi on Sunday, the largest action of its kind since 2007. Protests are rare in authoritarian Vietnam.
Tensions have also spread to the Internet.
More than 200 Vietnamese websites have been attacked and some defaced with Chinese flags, an Internet security firm said Friday.
The ministries of agriculture and foreign affairs are among those targeted since the beginning of June, said Nguyen Minh Duc, director of the state-linked Bach Khoa Internetwork Security Centre.
"We don't yet know if it concerns Chinese hackers," Duc said.

Friday, June 10, 2011

PH maintains ownership of Reed Bank in Spratlys

Photo by ABS-CBN

MANILA, Philippines - The Philippines maintained its ownership of Reed Bank, amid a reported call of China to all claimants of the Spratly Islands to stop all forms of explorations in the South China Sea.
MalacaƱang said oil exploration should continue in non-disputed areas or areas owned by the Philippines, including Reed Bank.
"Number one, we will have to confer with the Department of Energy and with the Department of Foreign Affairs with respect to the disputed areas. With respect to the non-disputed areas, we have every reason to do our exploration there because it's ours. There should be no issue as to our sovereign right to explore our own natural resources," Presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda told reporters in MalacaƱang.  
The Philippines stood by its statements on the recent incidents in the South China Sea, even after a statement from the spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, demanding that the Philippines "stop unilateral actions that damage China's sovereignty and interests at sea…and stop issuing irresponsible comments that are inconsistent with facts."
"Well, 'yun ang kanilang pananaw. Ang aming pananaw, ang sinabi po ni [Defense] Sec. Voltz Gazmin, it's a very responsible statement. We believe that we are asserting only what we claim is ours in our sovereign capacity…Dapat po walang question sa Western Palawan, sa Reed Bank, ito po ay atin, kasi ito ay 80 nautical miles po from Palawan in contrast to them which is about over 400 or a little less than 500 nautical miles from them. So obviously, ito po ay ating inaangkin noon pa and was never considered disputed," Lacierda said. Peaceful resolution of dispute, PNoy visit
Amid all these, the Philippines remains committed to having the issue resolved peacefully and diplomatically.
Lacierda said the situation is not worsening as all claimants remain committed to a peaceful resolution of the conflict. He said the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) continues to be in touch with Chinese Embassy officials in Manila.
"What we believe and what we strongly would like to see is the peaceful resolution in this area. China obviously has their claimed of the 9-dash line. We obviously dispute that so we would rather have a peaceful dialogue be undertaken by the various claimants on the South China Sea, not just between the Philippines and China, but also the other claimants of the area, for instance Vietnam and the other countries," Lacierda said.
The date for President Aquino's state visit to China has not yet been finalized but Aquino is expected to take up the Spratlys issue with his Chinese counterparts.
"Well, again, we don't have a firm schedule yet on China. The DFA would be handling that but definitely the President has been apprised of the situation and in the proper time, the President will relay to the Chinese officials, his counterpart, as to the conduct and attitude of the Philippines and the stand of the Philippines on that matter," Lacierda said.

US also alarmed by China's intrusions: AFP chief

US also alarmed by China's intrusions: AFP chief

MANILA, Philippines - The United States is also alarmed by China's intrusions into Philippine territory, Armed Forces chief of staff Gen. Eduardo Oban said on Thursday.
He said President Benigno Aquino III's visit to the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson last month had a message for China.
Under their Mutual Defense Treaty, the US is obliged to help the Philippines if it gets attacked by another country.
Oban said Chinese forces have entered Philippine territory 6 times this year.
To boost the Philippines' defense and answer China's intrusions, the Armed Forces plan to buy more equipment and hardware worth around P11.9 billion within the next 3 years.
The military currently only has one radar while at least 6 are needed to secure the country's airspace.
Oban said Philippine troops will fire back if they are attacked in the Spratlys.
However, he said that based on statements made by the Chinese defense minister during his visit to the Philippines last month, the situation in the South China Sea has not deteriorated yet into a shooting war. - Report from Ces OreƱa Drilon, ABS-CBN News

Thursday, June 9, 2011

China says PH allegations founded by 'bad rumor'

Photo by Reuters

While it seeks to strengthen its relationship with the Philippines, China said that the government’s claims of their supposed intrusions were just “founded by a bad rumor.” 

Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines Liu Jinchao said that the lingering dispute over claims on the oil-rich South China Sea was only fanned by false reports.

“It is unfortunate that this issue, the current dispute about the area, everything, was founded by a bad rumor,” Jinchao told reporters Thursday.

Jinchao was referring to previous statements from the Department of Foreign affairs (DFA) and the Armed Forces that foreign fighter jets were sighted near the disputed Spratly Islands. 

The ambassador also dismissed as a “bad rumor” the DFA’s claims of the presence of a China Marine Surveillance vessel and some Chinese navy ships at the vicinity the Amy Douglas Bank, which is within the Philippines’ Exclusive Economic Zone.

“That is [a] bad rumor because we have no intention of occupying one of the islands,” Jinchao added.

But he justified the presence of China’s patrol teams in the vast South China Sea, saying they “have every right to exercise jurisdiction over an area where we claim sovereignty” as part of their “normal exercises.”

Apart from China and the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan, and Vietnam also claim parts of the South China Sea.

To date, the Philippines has accused China of at least six incidents of intrusions. A diplomatic protest has since been filed before the United Nations.

While it is saying it is “ready to talk” with other claimants to reach a “feasible and effective way to relax the possible tension,” China stands firm on their ownership of the disputed parts of the South China Sea.

“China is firm on its territorial claims,” said Jinchao.  He also added, “We will never use force unless we are attacked one way or another.”

In a separate statement, Presidential spokesman Edwin Lacierda said the Philippines is “committed to a multilateral approach to the resolution of claims in the Spratlys.”

“The Philippines believes that its territorial rights must be asserted with firmness, its position reiterated at every appropriate opportunity,” Lacierda said.

Vietnam PM says sea sovereignty 'incontestable'

Map showing the disputed Spratly islands in the South China Sea, includes China's claimed sea border

Vietnam is determined to protect the "incontestable" sovereignty of two South China Sea archipelagos, the prime minister said in a report Thursday, intensifying a war of words with China.
Tensions between Beijing and Hanoi are at their highest in years owing to long-standing territorial disputes over the potentially oil-rich Paracel and Spratly archipelagos.
The situation escalated in late May after Vietnam accused China of violating its exclusive economic zone stretching to 200 nautical miles.
Hanoi said three Chinese marine surveillance vessels severed the exploration cables of a Vietnamese oil survey ship, violating the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
The public comments by Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, communist Vietnam's most powerful figure, are his first on the incident and indicate the seriousness with which the government views it.
"We continue to affirm strongly and to manifest the strongest determination of all the Party, of all the people and of all the army in protecting Vietnamese sovereignty in maritime zones and islands of the country," Dung said, in comments reported by the Thanh Nien daily.
He also reaffirmed "the incontestable maritime sovereignty of Vietnam towards the two archipelagos, the Paracels and Spratlys".
After the late May incident China said Vietnamese vessels were operating "illegally" and urged the country to "refrain from creating trouble".
Beijing says it is committed to peace in the South China Sea, but its more assertive maritime posture has caused concern among regional nations.
Tensions have also risen this year between China and the Philippines, another claimant to the Spratlys, where Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also say they have a stake.
At a regional security summit last weekend in Singapore, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates warned clashes may erupt in the South China Sea unless nations with conflicting territorial claims adopt a mechanism to settle disputes peacefully.
Hundreds of people held a peaceful anti-China protest outside Beijing's embassy in Hanoi on Sunday, the largest action of its kind since 2007. Protests are rare in authoritarian Vietnam.
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