The Philippines will not be cowed by China’s
deploying a large patrol vessel to Panatag Shoal in the West Philippine Sea,
Malacañang said on Friday.
The
Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) sees this action as “an aggravation” in the
11-day standoff in the disputed shoal.
The
Palace also said other countries’ territorial claims in the disputed waters
would be affected if China had its way at Panatag Shoal.
DFA
spokesperson Raul Hernandez confirmed on Friday that China has again beefed up
its presence in the area with the arrival of a third maritime surveillance
vessel.
“There
are now three Chinese maritime surveillance ships in the area; the third one
arrived this morning,” he said, adding that the Philippines’ lone Coast Guard
vessel, the BRP Edsa, also remains in the area.
“It’s a
civilian ship from the fisheries department of China. This was confirmed by our
Philippine Coast Guard in the area, but there is no report whether it was the
gunboat,” he said.
“Our
Coast Guard said it is civilian because it’s white. It did not say how powerful
it is,” he added when pressed if it was the same powerful military vessel that
China had reportedly dispatched to the disputed area.
“The
world knows that China has more ships and planes than the Philippines has and
we cannot compete in this manner. We cannot solve this case in this manner. We
are committed to a diplomatic solution,” Hernandez said.
“And we
understand that the world is watching, and the issue at hand has a wider
implication on how China is asserting its territorial claims which have no
basis in international law. We hope that China would behave as a responsible
member of the international community,” he added.
Eleven
days into a fresh dispute with China over conflicting territorial claims in the
disputed waters, the Philippines has yet to hear a statement of support from
its mutual defence ally, the United States.
But
Secretary Ricky Carandang, head of the Presidential Communications Development
and Strategic Planning Office, said the Palace believed the Philippines had
enough support from the United States despite the Americans’ silence on the
standoff between the Philippines and China at Panatag Shoal.
“We
will not be intimidated,” Carandang said in a text message to reporters who
sought Malacañang’s reaction to China’s deployment of a “gunboat” to Panatag
Shoal, presumably to face off a Philippine Navy search and rescue vessel locked
in a standoff with two Chinese surveillance ships at the shallows
internationally known as Scarborough Shoal.
The
standoff began on April 10 when Chinese vessels blocked a Philippine warship
from arresting crews of Chinese fishing boats caught poaching protected marine
life in the area.
Most advanced patrol boat
Chinese
state media reported on Friday that China’s most advanced fishing patrol
vessel, the 108-metre Yuzheng 310, had arrived to protect Chinese fishers
operating in the South China Sea, which the Philippines calls West Philippine
Sea.
The
Yuzheng 310 will protect China’s “interests in territorial waters,” the Chinese
state news agency Xinhua said.
“The
Yuzheng 310 will conduct routine patrols in waters off the coast of Huangyan
Island, so as to protect China’s sea rights and ensure the safety of Chinese
fishermen,” Xinhua quoted the South China Sea Fishery Bureau as saying.
China
refers to Panatag Shoal as Huangyan Island. It says it has sovereign rights to
all of the South China Sea, even waters close to the coast of other countries
and hundreds of kilometres from its own landmass.
The
Philippine Department of National Defence said yesterday that it was not clear
whether the Yuzheng 310 was going into Panatag Shoal.
“The
Chinese media said it [would] be deployed to the West Philippine Sea, but did
not state Scarborough Shoal,” Peter Galvez, DND spokesperson, said.
“As
long as it stays in international waters, we have no problem there,” Galvez
said.
“[But
if] it goes within the [Philippines’ exclusive economic zone], that’s a
different story,” Galvez said.
Correcting
local reporters, Galvez said Chinese media reports described the Yuzheng 310 as
a fisheries vessel. “[It’s] civilian,” Galvez said. “We have no problem with
that.”
But he
added, “We hope [the Chinese] do not [take] any action that may derail the
current diplomatic initiatives toward a peaceful resolution [of the standoff].”
“We
continue to discuss the issue with the Chinese government,” Carandang said in
his message to reporters. “The Philippine government is determined to find a
peaceful solution to this. But we’re also equally determined to assert our
sovereignty over . . . our territory.”
Carandang
said that if, for some reason, Scarborough Shoal is determined to be Chinese
territory and not Philippine territory, “then exactly what does that mean for
the laws on the exclusive economic zones?”
“[I]f
you create a precedent like that, does that not mean now that in other areas or
other parts of the world one country can claim . . . territory even if it lies
within the exclusive economic zone of another country?” Carandang asked.
Panatag
Shoal is well within the 200-nautical-mile (370-kilometer) exclusive economic
zone (EEZ) of the Philippines under the United Nations Conventions on the Laws
of the Sea (Unclos).
Carandang
said the dispute has far-reaching implications on ties between the Philippines
and China.
“[W]hile
this issue has immediate implications for us and for China, it also has
long-term implications for the rest of the region—for stability in the region,”
Carandang said.
Nine-dash theory
“If the
Philippines loses this, this will have implications for other countries [that]
have competing claims with China, particularly those affected by the nine-dash
line,” he said.
The
nine-dash theory is China’s delineation of its territory in the South China Sea
enclosed by nine dashes on the map that encompass islands and islets in the
Spratly archipelago, parts of which are claimed by the Philippines, Brunei,
Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan.
“So
this might look like an issue between the Philippines and China alone, but
actually the implications of this have effects on other countries [in] the
region,” Carandang said.
Carandang
said it was up to the United States if it wanted to comment on the dispute
between the Philippines and China.
“We
have a defence relationship with the United States,” Carandang said. “We bought
equipment from them. We bought vessels from them. We continue to purchase from
them.”
He
mentioned the current joint exercises between American and Philippine troops
and the Mutual Defence Treaty between the two countries.
“I
think what’s happening now is sufficient in terms of the support they are
showing.” Carandang said. “I don’t know if it will make a difference and that’s
really up to them whether they want to speak on this matter,” he added.
Sue China for ‘bullying’
The
Philippines has challenged China to bring their dispute to the International
Tribunal on the Law of the Sea (Itlos), but China has refused.
On
Friday, the party-list group Bayan Muna urged President Aquino to file charges
in Itlos against China for “bullying” the Philippines at Panatag Shoal.
Bayan
Muna party-list Rep. Neri Colmenares said the President should also press the
Philippine claim in other international bodies, as the country’s claim on
Panatag is “more solid” than China’s.
The DFA
said the country was ready to go to Itlos.
“If
China will not join us, then our legal team is preparing to go to Itlos
unilaterally in order to have this issue resolved in that proper forum,”
Hernandez told reporters Friday. “We are asserting not only our territorial
rights, but also our sovereign rights over that area,” he said
Norman
Bordadora
Philippine
Daily Inquirer
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