(AP) Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte was in Beijing on
Thursday for a meeting with counterpart Xi Jinping in which the
Southeast Asian leader is expected to discuss a ruling on the disputed
South China Sea.
The 2016 Hague arbitration mostly invalidated China’s claim to
virtually the entire South China Sea and found that it violated the U.N.
Convention on the Law of the Sea.
The row over the waters — a major global shipping route thought to be
rich in oil and gas reserves — has for years marred China’s
relationship with the Philippines and other neighboring countries with
territorial claims over the disputed area, where Beijing has transformed
a string of disputed reefs into missile-protected island bases.
Duterte, however, has largely avoided the subject in favor of seeking
warmer ties with Beijing. Philippine nationalists and left-wing groups
have criticized the president for not immediately demanding Chinese
compliance with the arbitration ruling, which came the same year Duterte
took office.
Philippine Ambassador to China Jose Santiago “Chito” Santa Romana
told reporters Thursday that Duterte has mentioned the ruling to Xi
several times, but not in a direct discussion as he plans to do this
meeting.
Duterte “has exerted a lot of diplomatic capital to build a reservoir
of goodwill and friendship with President Xi,” Santa Romana said. “So
he has decided that it’s time to include in the diplomatic agenda and in
the discussions sensitive issues that may have caused misunderstanding
if it were brought up in the past.”
Santa Romana added that Duterte is in Beijing “to build bridges, not to burn bridges with China.”
It’s unlikely that Duterte’s move will have any effect on China, said
Jay Batongbacal, a maritime affairs scholar at the University of the
Philippines.
“China’s position will not change just because Duterte changes tune,”
Batongbacal said. “At best, Duterte might be seen as using the
arbitration discussion as a move to leverage other concessions. At
worst, it may be just for show.”
China refused to participate in the arbitration case initiated by
Duterte’s predecessor, Benigno Aquino III, and has ignored the ruling. A
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said last week that the country’s
stance has not changed.
Philippine Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana asked Beijing this
month to explain the activities of Chinese research vessels and warships
in what the Philippines claims as its waters, and accused China of
“bullying.”
Lorenzana said that China did not ask for permission to send several
warships through the Sibutu Strait at the southern tip of the Philippine
archipelago on four occasions between February and July. He said two
Chinese research ships have also been operating in the Philippines’
exclusive economic zone.
Meanwhile, Philippine military spokesman Brigadier General Edgard
Arevalo accused China of “duplicity,” claiming the Chinese warships shut
off their identification transponders while passing through Philippine
waters to avoid radar detection.
China has said it is ready to work with the Philippines to jointly
safeguard maritime security and order. In an apparent attempt to ease
tensions ahead of Thursday’s meeting, a fishery association in southern
Guangdong province apologized this week for colliding with a Philippine
fishing boat in June.
The Philippines filed a diplomatic protest after the fisherman said a
Chinese vessel rammed their anchored boat and abandoned them as it sank
in the Reed Bank.
“I feel deep regret that this accident had to happen and I would like
to express my deep sympathy to the Filipino fishermen,” the president
of the Guangdong Fishery Mutual Insurance Association said in a letter
sent to the Philippine Embassy in Beijing.
Santa Romana said Thursday that the Philippines wants to achieve
joint exploration with China in the South China Sea in order to address
the country’s energy security and power supply issues.
Source: Associated Press By Yanan Wang and Jim Gomez
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