Monday, March 31, 2014

US accuses China of provoking Philippines Agence France-Presse | April 1, 2014

US accuses China of provoking Philippines

Agence France-Presse
| April 1, 2014 at 9:11 am
 

Outgoing Philippine Marine troops salute the flag while being lowered March 29, Friday afternoon sundown at the BRP Sierra Madre, a marine fleet detachment in Ayungin shoal. INQUIRER PHOTO / GRIG C. MONTEGRANDE

WASHINGTON, United States—The United States criticized China as provocative Monday after its coast guard tried to block a Philippine vessel that was rotating troops in the tense South China Sea.

The attempted Chinese blockade, which led to a two-hour standoff with the Philippine ship, is “a provocative and destabilizing action,” State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf told reporters.

Harf said that the Philippines had permission to resupply troops to the remote reef, the Second Thomas Shoal, because it has kept a naval presence there since before a 2002 declaration of conduct in the South China Sea.

“As a treaty ally of the Republic of the Philippines, the United States urges China to refrain from further provocative behavior by allowing the Philippines to continue to maintain its presence at Second Thomas Shoal (Ayungin Shoal),” she said.

The incident was the latest in the South China Sea, where China claims a vast area that overlaps with several neighbors’ claims.

On March 9, China successfully turned away a similar resupply boat from the Philippines.

The United States has been warning China against taking more drastic action in the South China Sea after it declared an air defense identification zone in November over much of the East China Sea, including islands administered by Japan.

RELATED STORIES

Ayungin Marines get medals, haircut, 2-week vacation for bravery, endurance

UN case not a challenge to China—Aquino

Chinese coast guard harassing PH ship at Ayungin Shoal


China summons Manila envoy over South China Sea legal case, Reuters 31 March 2014

UPDATE 2-China summons Manila envoy over South China Sea legal case

Mon Mar 31, 2014 8:02pm GMT
 
[-Text [+]
(Adds comment from U.S. State Department)
By Ben Blanchard
BEIJING, March 31 (Reuters) - China summoned the Philippines ambassador on Monday to lodge a strong complaint over Manila's seeking of international arbitration in a festering territorial dispute over the South China Sea.
The Philippines filed the case against China on Sunday at an arbitration tribunal in The Hague, subjecting Beijing to international legal scrutiny over the waters for the first time.
The United States, a treaty ally of the Philippines, said on Sunday that the right of any state to use dispute resolution mechanisms under the Convention on the Law of the Sea should be respected.
On Monday, the U.S. State Department accused China's coastguard of "harassment" of Philippine vessels and called its attempt on Saturday to block a Philippine resupply mission to the Second Thomas Shoal, a disputed atoll, "a provocative and destabilising action."
Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin told the Philippines' ambassador that Beijing was "extremely dissatisfied and resolutely opposed" to the case Manila had brought to The Hague, repeating that China did not accept it and would not participate.
"The Philippines forcing of international arbitration is not conducive towards resolving the Sino-Philippine dispute over the South China Sea," the Foreign Ministry cited Liu as saying.
The case would not shake China's resolve to protect its sovereignty and territorial integrity, Liu added.   Continued...
The only way to address the issue was through bilateral talks, he said, repeating another of China's standard lines.
BLOCKING ATTEMPT
At the weekend, a Philippine vessel delivered food, water and troops to the Second Thomas Shoal, evading two Chinese coastguard ships trying to block its path.
Liu expressed anger at that too, especially as the Philippines took reporters along to what China calls Ren'ai Reef. "China will not tolerate the Philippines' occupation of Ren'ai Reef in any form," he said, calling on the Philippines to stop its "provocative behaviour".
Philippine President Benigno Aquino, speaking to reporters earlier on Monday, said he was not seeking confrontation.
"We are not here to challenge China, to provoke them into any action, but I do believe that they should recognise we have the right to defend our own interests," he said.
State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the Philippines was permitted, under the principles of the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, to maintain previously established outposts without interference.
"As a treaty ally of the Republic of the Philippines, the United States urges China to refrain from further provocative behaviour by allowing the Philippines to continue to maintain its presence at Second Thomas Shoal," she told a regular news briefing in Washington
"We urge China to manage disputes peacefully, to clarify its ambiguous claim in accordance with international law, and to accelerate negotiations with ASEAN on a meaningful code of conduct," she said, referring to the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
The latest developments in the dispute come ahead of a visit next month by U.S. President Barack Obama to Asia, including the Philippines. Obama is expected to offer reassurances to regional allies in the face of increasingly assertive Chinese territorial claims.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said the United States was not a party to the dispute and had said many times it would not take a position.
"We demand that the United States be as good as their word, and do more to benefit peace and stability in the South China Sea, not the opposite," Hong said.
"The Philippine side will certainly face consequences for its provocative actions," he added, without elaborating.
China displays its claims to the South China Sea on official maps with a so-called nine-dash line that stretches deep into the maritime heart of Southeast Asia.
Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also have claims to parts of the potentially energy-rich waters. (Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Manny Mogato in MANILA and David Brunnstrom in WASHINGTON; Editing by Nick Macfie, Alison Williams and Paul Simao)

MARKET UPDATE

  • Africa
  • US
  • Europe
  • Asia
UK £USD =1.6662
EuroUSD =1.3773
RandUSD =0.0950

China and The Philippines Continue South China Sea Disagreement All The Way To International Court, New York Times

China and The Philippines Continue South China Sea Disagreement All The Way To International Court

.
The Sierra Madre, a rusted warship that has been grounded on the Second Thomas Shoal since 1999, has been kept in place as a way to reinforce the Philippine claim to the shoal. Credit Jay Directo/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
By Jane Perlez
The New York Times
BEIJING — China accused the Philippines on Monday of illegally occupying Chinese territory after a Filipino vessel outmaneuvered the Chinese Coast Guard and resupplied a ship that has been stranded for 15 years on the Second Thomas Shoal, a tiny reef in the South China Sea.
Chinese ships prevented the Philippines from resupplying the boat and its eight-man military crew in early March, but on Saturday a Filipino vessel manned by troops managed to keep the Chinese at bay by going into shallow waters and lifting food onto the stranded ship.
“This is a political provocation,” the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman, Hong Lei, said at a regular briefing on Monday, adding that the Philippines was “hyping” its “illegal occupation” by filing a case on Sunday with the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague.
The submission by the Philippines argues that the Second Thomas Shoal — known as Ayungin in the Philippines and Ren’ai Reef in China — is 105 nautical miles from the Philippines, well inside the 200 nautical miles of a Philippine exclusive economic zone that allows the Philippines to exploit the waters around the shoal under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, the brief says.
The Philippine secretary of foreign affairs, Albert del Rosario, said at a news conference in Manila on Sunday that a ruling on the submission — which includes 4,000 pages and 40 maps and was written by a Washington law firm — was expected in 2015.
The State Department noted the filing Sunday and said the United States supported the peaceful resolution of territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
The cat-and-mouse maneuvers between the Philippines, an American ally with little naval capacity, and China, which has a fast-expanding navy, have captured attention for what they might foretell about future rivalries in the South China Sea.
China claims about 80 percent of the South China Sea, a vital waterway for world trade.
President Obama is scheduled to visit the Philippines during a tour of Asian allies in April, a trip that does not include China but is bound to highlight China’s projection of power in the South China Sea and the East China Sea.
In the past year, China has intensified its surveillance operations in the South China Sea, dispatching fishing vessels, coast guard ships and navy ships to keep watch.
To publicize its determination to keep the Second Thomas Shoal, the Philippines invited reporters on board the government vessel that was sent to resupply the Sierra Madre, a rusted warship that has been grounded on the reef since 1999. The warship and its crew had been kept in place as a way to reinforce the Philippine claim to the shoal.
China says that the shoal is part of the Nansha Islands, which it says are inside the so-called nine-dash line that runs deep into the waters around Southeast Asia. The line was first drawn by the Nationalist government in the 1940s and has been used by the Communist government to justify its claims to a wide area of islands and sea.
As the resupply vessel approached the Sierra Madre on Saturday, two Chinese ships approached the Filipino vessel and sent a radio message saying that it should leave immediately and “stop all” illegal activities. The Filipino vessel kept going and found waters too shallow for the Chinese ships so that the resupply operation could go ahead, Reuters reported.
After food and water were heaved onto the Sierra Madre, the crew on board left and a new crew began its rotation.
The Global Times, a Chinese state-run newspaper with nationalist views, said in an editorial on Monday that the “small and weak” Philippines had become the vanguard force of “provoking China.” It warned that China had the ability to force Filipino soldiers off the reef at any time, “like taking thieves away.”

One Response to “China and The Philippines Continue South China Sea Disagreement All The Way To International Court”

  1. AKA John Galt Says:
    Reblogged this on U.S. Constitutional Free Press.

Leave a Reply

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.
Join 683 other followers
 

China rejects sea dispute arbitration By Pia Lee-Brago (The Philippine Star) | Updated April 1, 2014 - 12:00am

China rejects sea dispute arbitration

 0  10 googleplus0  0 
MANILA, Philippines - As its sailors began water cannon drills around Ayungin Shoal, China declared yesterday its rejection of Manila’s turning to international arbitration on the West Philippine Sea dispute.
“China has stated time and again that it does not accept the Philippines’ submission of disputes with China in the South China Sea for international arbitration. This position stays unchanged,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Hong Lei said.
This developed as Chinese surveillance ships were reportedly conducting water cannon drills around Ayungin (Second Thomas) Shoal in the West Philippine Sea, apparently in preparation for another encounter with Filipino fishermen or troops delivering supplies and provisions to a small garrison stationed on the grounded Navy ship BRP Sierra Madre.
“We have been observing them doing the (water cannon) exercises since last week,” a Marine stationed on the Sierra Madre said.
The Philippines submitted on Sunday a memorial or written argument to the UN arbitral tribunal in The Hague to buttress its case against China’s claim over almost the entire South China Sea.
Hong said China’s position on issues concerning the South China Sea is clear-cut and consistent, and that it is ready to settle any dispute with its neighbors only through bilateral talks.
Headlines ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
“China has all along adhered to settling disputes through direct negotiations with countries concerned,” Hong said.
He said Beijing’s position is clearly stated in the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea (DOC) jointly signed by China and Southeast Asian countries, including the Philippines. He said such an arrangement has been agreed upon between Beijing and Manila based on some bilateral documents.
“No matter how the Philippine memorial is packaged, the direct cause of the dispute between China and the Philippines is the latter’s illegal occupation of some of China’s islands and reefs in the South China Sea,” Hong said.
“At the heart of the matter are the disputes between the two sides on the sovereignty over islands and reefs, and delimitation of maritime boundaries. Yet disputes such as these have already been excluded from arbitration procedures through a declaration made by China in 2006 pursuant to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea  (UNCLOS),” he pointed out.
China’s rejection of the Philippines’ resorting to international arbitration, Hong said, is solidly based on international law.
“China urges the Philippines to comprehensively and effectively implement the consensus repeatedly reaffirmed between the two sides and the DOC, and return to the right track of settling the disputes through bilateral negotiations,” he said.
The Philippines submitted electronically its 4,000-page memorial to the registrar of The Hague-based United Nations arbitral tribunal on Sunday.
Copies were also sent to each arbitrator – the Chinese ambassador in the Netherlands and the Chinese chargé d’affaires in Manila.
Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario said the memorial, consisting of 10 volumes, presents in detail the Philippines’ position on its dispute with China over some potentially oil and mineral rich shoals, reefs, and islets in the West Philippine Sea.
Earlier, Chinese vessels drove away Filipino fishermen with water cannon from Ayungin Shoal. Chinese maritime vessels also prevented two Filipino ships from delivering supplies to the Marine garrison on Ayungin.
The United States said it was troubled by China’s action, prompting Beijing to remind Washington of its reported commitment not to take sides on the issue.
Chinese Foreign ministry spokesperson Qin Gang said the “comments made by the US in disregard of facts are inconsistent with its non-party capacity.”
US State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki and Charge d’Affaires Brian Goldbeck of the US embassy in Manila called China’s action on Ayungin Shoal “a provocative move that raises tensions.” 

No provocation

At Malacañang, President Aquino maintained that going to the arbitral tribunal is not an act of provocation but a peaceful way to defend the country’s territorial integrity and sovereignty.
He also said the Chinese coast guard’s attempt to stop a Filipino civilian ship from delivering supplies to the Filipino garrison on Ayungin was deplorable.
“We are not here to challenge China, to provoke them into any action, but I do believe that they should recognize we have the right to defend our own interests,” Aquino said.
Asked how the Ayungin Shoal incidents would affect the country’s relations with China or Manila’s case with the arbitral tribunal, Aquino cited Article 2, Section 7 of the Constitution which states that the government “shall pursue an independent foreign policy and in its relations with other states, the paramount consideration shall be national sovereignty, territorial integrity, national interest, and the right to self-determination.”
“So what are our options with regard to the whole issue of the West Philippine Sea and the South China Sea? I subscribed to this oath when I assumed office. I have to defend national territory and our sovereignty,” Aquino said after the graduation rites at the Philippine National Police Academy.
“There is also a requirement (to adhere to) peaceful and rules-based (approach). We went through arbitration primarily because that is a means to resolve the dispute consistent with the policy of (employing) peaceful means, and in conformity with the international law,” the President said.

Water cannon drills

Western Command (Wescom) chief Lt. Gen. Roy Deveraturda, meanwhile, confirmed the water cannon drills by Chinese coast guard vessels.
He said they have been monitoring the activity following the water cannon attack on Filipino fishermen on Panatag (Scarborough) Shoal in Zambales on Jan. 27.
The last water cannon drill was held on March 27 – the same day the military dispatched a civilian ship, the BFAR AM-700, to replenish the food supplies of soldiers guarding Ayungin Shoal.
The ship also carried Marines to replace troops stationed on the shoal for more than five months.
Military officials said two of four Chinese surveillance ships in the “hosing” operations on Panatag Shoal were involved in last Saturday’s incident in which a Filipino ship delivering supplies to Sierra Madre was able to outmaneuver the Chinese vessels.
In the incident, one of the Chinese vessels even threatened to ram the Philippine ship and cross its bow while blowing its horn.
The Chinese displayed an LED sign, ordering the Philippine vessel to leave. But the Filipino soldiers stood their ground and managed to reach BRP Sierra Madre.
“Whatever happens we will not abandon our post. We will not leave our station. The place is ours and we will guard and protect it as ordered by our superiors,” Lt. Mike Pelotera, outgoing Ayungin detachment commander, said.
The nine-man Marine contingent guarding Ayungin Shoal arrived in Barangay Macarascas in Puerto Princesa yesterday after more than 29 hours of sea travel. They were picked up from Sabina Shoal by BRP Apolinario Mabini.
Long-haired and sunburned, the soldiers, led by Pelotera, received Bronze Cross medals from Deveraturda and Naval Forces Western Command chief Commodore Manuel Natalio Abinuman. The Bronze Cross is awarded to soldiers who risk their lives in the line of duty.
Meanwhile, Vice President Jejomar Binay said yesterday that replenishing supplies for the soldiers guarding the Philippine territory is the government’s “responsibility and right.”
Binay made the statement as he reiterated his appeal to China to stop doing actions that will raise tension between the Philippine and Chinese governments.
“Despite our dispute with China, I am still confident that we can transcend this problem and remain friends within a global community based on the rule of law and mutual respect,” he said.
Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV, for his part, said that the country can only pray that its efforts to settle its territorial dispute with China through arbitration would work, since the Asian giant has refused to recognize the process time and again.  – With Aurea Calica, Jaime Laude, Jose  Rodel Clapano, Michelle Zoleta, Marvin Sy