MANILA, Philippines – The Philippines cannot expect the US “to die for us,” so the country “will just have to navigate our way around” and go to China.
President Duterte vowed to “demand” the fishing rights of Filipinos and to talk of a possible joint venture for oil exploration when he goes to China.
“I’m willing to talk. I’m going to China…I will present the problem,” Duterte in a speech during the inauguration of the Filinvest Development Corp. power plant in Villanueva, Misamis Oriental on Thursday.
“You can just imagine if we can get their help in the years to come,” the President said.
File photo of Filipino fishermen waving from a fishing boat bound to fish near Scarborough Shoal in Masinloc, Zambales May 10, 2012. During the past few years, China has made Filipino and Vietnamese fishermen unwelcome — sometimes violently — in the South China Sea. REUTERS photo by Erik De Castro
According to Duterte, the rights of Filipino fishermen is non-negotiable and should be given back by China.
He noted the Philippines and China were previously talking of a joint gas exploration in the contested areas in the South China Sea.
“When former president Benigno Aquino rose to power, he stopped it so China got angry. They are really mad at him,” Duterte said.
Malacañang has yet to announce the date for Duterte’s visit to China, although it earlier said it would be within the year.
China’s warship Huangshan and Russia’s Admrial Tributs operating together in the South China Sea during Joint Sea 2016, September 2016. Xinhua photo
Duterte also said he is going to use the decision of the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) in The Hague as parameters in talking with China.
The PCA rendered China’s claim to historic rights through its nine-dash line in the South China Sea as contrary to international law.
It determined that none of the Spratlys could be considered islands because they cannot sustain a stable human community or independent economic life.
The court also found China guilty of damaging the marine environment by building artificial islands and illegally preventing Filipinos from fishing and conducting oil exploration in the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone.
China has repeatedly said it would not honor the decision.
http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2016/09/25/1627245/duterte-demand-fishing-rights-pinoys
*******************************
Philippines President Duterte Plans To Visit Vietnam and Japan
Diplomats in the Philippines are in talks with counterparts in Japan and China to arrange visits by controversial President Rodrigo Duterte at the end of next month, officials in Manila said on Friday.
Dates were still being worked out for the proposed trips by the outspoken leader, several officials said, remaining anonymous because they were not authorized to speak to media.
A Japanese foreign ministry official confirmed plans were being made. China’s Foreign Ministry did not confirm the trip, but reiterated its invitation for Duterte to visit “at an early date”.
The Philippines’ relations with Japan are warm but those with China have long been frosty over territorial wrangles in the South China Sea.
Duterte has repeatedly said conflict was pointless and he wants to get along and do business with Beijing.
Some analysts believe Duterte’s uncharacteristic verbal restraint toward China, in contrast to his stinging rebukes of the United States, United Nations and European Union, shows he is hedging in pursuit of his goal of an independent foreign policy and reducing reliance on former colonial ruler Washington.
Duterte has lashed out against Washington, the EU and the United Nations for criticizing his deadly anti-drugs campaign, in which nearly 3,000 people have been killed.
China and the Philippines are trying to find a way to break the ice after a verdict by an arbitral court in The Hague in July invalidated China’s claims to most of the South China Sea and gave Manila the legal high ground in the dispute.
During a speech on Thursday, Duterte said he would go to China this year and, without elaborating, told Chinese businessmen: “You will see me often”.
He reiterated he would not deviate from the court ruling but would seek a way out of a four-year deadlock at the disputed Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea and for China’s coastguard to let Filipinos fish there unimpeded. The arbitration panel ruled that no one country can legally control the shoal.
“China has already said several times that it welcomes President Duterte to visit China at an early date,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang told reporters at a regular briefing.
“As long as both the Philippines and China continue to maintain the political will to reconcile our differences, there are no obstacles that cannot be overcome,” Lu said.
A source in Duterte’s office said it was possible former president Fidel Ramos, his new China envoy, could visit as early as next week to lay the groundwork for talks.
The relationship with Japan is far less complicated and Tokyo has agreed to provide 10 coastguard vessels to Manila to support its maritime security efforts.
Japan, a major investor across Southeast Asia, has been providing coastguard training and ships also to Vietnam, another country at odds with China over its maritime assertiveness.
The proposed October visits would be among Duterte’s first as president in what has been a colorful, at times dramatic first three months in office.
He attended a summit of Asian leaders in Laos earlier this month and has been to Indonesia. He is due to visit Vietnam next week.
(Additional reporting by Linda Sieg in Tokyo, and Michael Martina and Sue-Lin Wong in Beijing; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
Related:
South China Sea — Weekly Round Up
Wildlife Trafficking: Experts Now Believe Demand For Rhino Horn from Chinese and Vietnamese Markets Alone Would Kill Off All The Global Rhino Population Without Safeguards (Ties to South China Sea, giant clams, pangolins, coral reef destruction, etc)
South China Sea: Vietnam and China Make Ready For Whatever May Happen
Philippines President Duterte: We May Need The U.S. In The South China Sea After All
Vietnam, China Leaders Meet and Report “New Era” of Peace and Prosperity
China Is Vietnam’s Top Trading Partner (And Don’t You Forget It)
South China Sea: China says it should maintain peace with Vietnam — But no one is smiling
Fishing boats set sail from Tongling port in Dongshan County, southeast China’s Fujian Province, Aug. 1, 2015.
South China Sea: One of the World’s Biggest Fisheries Is on the Verge of Collapse
Australian government reaches a 39.3 million Australian dollar ($29.6 million) settlement with the owners of a Chinese ship for environmental damage caused to the Great Barrier Reef (“China risks becoming a pariah nation because of its overfishing, illegal fishing and damage to the global ocean environments….”)
South China Sea: Photos show China building new islands
Ash Carter: Russia sowing seeds of global instability
China Coast Guard — In this photo released by the 11th Regional Coast Guard Headquarters of Japan, a Chinese coastguard vessel sails near the disputed islands in the East China Sea on August 6, 2016. Japan said this ship was watching over more than 200 Chinese fishing boats fishing illegally in Japanese waters. AP