Monday, June 29, 2015

China angered by Philippine documentary on South China Sea

China angered by Philippine documentary on South China Sea

China on Monday accused the Philippines of spreading misinformation and "creating the illusion of the victim" in their dispute over the South China Sea after Manila aired a three-part documentary defending its position.

     
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BEIJING: China on Monday accused the Philippines of spreading misinformation and "creating the illusion of the victim" in their dispute over the South China Sea after Manila aired a three-part documentary defending its position.
The first part of the documentary series titled "Karapatan sa Dagat", or maritime rights, was released as the Philippines observed Independence Day on June 12.
"The Philippines is attempting to mislead and deceive, gain sympathy by cheating and create the illusion of the 'victim'," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in a statement on the ministry's website. He accused the Philippines of aiming to incite the people of the two countries.
Tit-for-tat rhetorical exchanges between the Philippines and China over the South China Sea dispute have escalated in recent months.
Last week, a Defence Ministry spokesman accused the Philippines of trying to draw other countries into the dispute to stir up regional tensions after Japan joined a military drill with the Philippines.
The Philippines had said the documentary was intended to inform its people and to rally public support behind government policies and actions.
Hua's statement added: "China and the Philippines are long-term friends and good neighbours and have shown that they have been able to fully and properly handle the South China Sea issue through friendly consultations."
Speaking later at a daily news briefing, Hua also expressed anger at comments from the U.S. State Department's number two diplomat, Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who called China's large scale reclamation projects in the South China Sea "a threat to peace and stability."
The United States should "stop making irresponsible comments which deliberately stoke regional tensions and confrontation", Hua said.
China has become increasingly assertive in the potentially energy-rich South China Sea, building artificial islands in areas over which the Philippines and other countries have rival claims. The moves have sparked alarm regionally and in Washington.
China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Saturday that if China changed its position on claims over the South China Sea, it would shame its ancestors, while not facing up to infringements of Chinese sovereignty there would shame its children.
(Reporting by Sui-Lee Wee; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Edmund Klamann)

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