No Beijing commitment to withdraw vessels
By Jerry EsplanadaPhilippine Daily Inquirer
12:40 am | Tuesday, June 19th, 2012
RAISING THE FLAG A member of Chinaâs ocean expedition team raises the Chinese flag while another holds a survey rod on Scarborough Shoal, which China refers to as Huangyan Island. The Philippines calls the shoal some 370 kilometers west of Zambales Panatag. Chinese Embassy website
China has no immediate plans of pulling out its vessels at Scarborough Shoal in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea), the Chinese Embassy said Monday.
In a text message to the Philippine Daily Inquirer, Zhang Hua, spokesperson and deputy chief of the political section of the Chinese Embassy, said Beijing had not expressed any intention of withdrawing its service ships from Scarborough Shoal, which both China and the Philippines claim.
Contrary to Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosarioâs statement to reporters on Friday, China did not commit to withdraw its seven vessels from the shoal.
âThere is no such commitment from China,â Zhang said.
In Beijing, Hong Mei, spokesperson for the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, wondered âwhere the so-called commitment the Philippine side mentioned on Chinaâs withdrawal of vessels came from.â
Hong said China hoped âthe Philippine side can restrain their words and behavior and do workings conducive to the development of the bilateral relationsâ between the two countries.
China, Hong said, âwill continue to maintain administration and vigilanceâ over Scarborough Shoal, which Beijing refers to as Huangyan Island. Manila calls it Panatag Shoal or Bajo de Masinloc.
But more than 20 Chinese fishing boats stationed at the shoalâs lagoon are withdrawing because of bad weather, according to an advisory issued by the salvage and rescue unit of Chinaâs Ministry of Transport on Sunday.
Raul Hernandez, spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), said Monday night that Chinaâs announcement of the pullout was âconsistent with our agreement with the Chinese government on the withdrawal of all vessels from the shoalâs lagoon to defuse tensionsâ in the area.
Two Philippine vessels had been facing off with seven Chinese government vessels at the shoal since April 10 after Philippine authorities caught Chinese fishermen poaching for sharks and collecting rare clams and corals in the area.
Both asserting sovereignty over the shoal, the two countries had refused to budge. The shoal is within the exclusive economic zone of the Philippines, which has proposed to bring the dispute to the International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea for settlement.
China, which claims the entire West Philippine Sea, has refused and tried to apply an economic squeeze to force the Philippines to yield. It has suspended Chinese tours to the Philippines and tightened inspection rules for fruit imports from the Philippines.
Though indirectly, the United States has weighed in, announcing two weeks ago details of a new military strategy that would see 60 percent of US naval assets moving to the Asia-Pacific region before the end of the decade, and announcing assistance for the modernization of the Philippine military.
President Benigno Aquino traveled to Washington last week and had discussions with US President Barack Obama, who stressed the importance of the US-Philippine Mutual Defense Treaty and renewed US pledges of helping the Philippines update its defenses.
Bad weather
But on Friday night, President Aquino, citing bad weather, ordered home a Philippine Coast Guard vessel and a Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources survey ship from Scarborough Shoal.
At the time, Typhoon âButchoyâ was approaching the Philippines from the Pacific Ocean and a low-pressure system over Palawan province was combining with its winds to create squalls dangerous to shipping in the West Philippine Sea.
Chinese commitment
Asked by reporters on Friday if China was withdrawing its vessels, Del Rosario said, âWe are waiting for them to comply with their commitment.â
It was understood that China and the Philippines had agreed to break a two-month standoff at Scarborough Shoal to save the crew of their vessels from unnecessary exposure to danger in stormy seas.
As of Friday, China had seven government ships outside the lagoon and 20-26 fishing boats in the lagoon, according to the DFA.
On Sunday, Malacañang, through deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte, said, citing Del Rosarioâs statement about a Chinese commitment, the Philippines was waiting for China to recall its vessels from the shoal.
Eighth vessel
But instead of pulling out its ships from the area, the Chinese government is sending another vessel, the âNanhaijiu 115,â to the shoal, ostensibly to assist the Chinese fishing boats in making a run for shelter amid stormy weather.
In its advisory, the Chinese transport ministry cited âinclement weather and strong tidesâ at Scarborough Shoal as the reason for withdrawing the fishing boats.
The agency also said it was deploying the Nanhaijiu 115 to the shoal to âhelp Chinese fishermen and fishing boats pull out safely for shelterâ in undisclosed locations.
The deployment of the Nanhaijiu 115 brought to eight the number of Chinese government vessels stationed at the shoal.
PH move welcomed
On Sunday, China welcomed President Aquinoâs order pulling out the two Philippine vessels from the shoal and expressed hope it would calm tensions in the area.
A statement on the Chinese Embassyâs website on Monday said âthe Chinese public service ships have continued to keep close watch over Scarborough Shoal waters to provide administrative and other services to Chinese fishing boats in accordance with Chinaâs laws, so as to ensure Chinese fishermen a good environment for operations in their traditional fishing grounds.â
The continued presence of the Chinese ships in the area was also meant to âprevent further provocation by the Philippines,â it also said.
Zhang told the Inquirer on Sunday that âthe Chinese side has been urging the Philippine side to take measures to deescalate the situationâ at the shoal.
That meant China wanted the Philippines to withdraw its vessels from the area. The vessels were ordered home on Friday but Del Rosario said, âWhen the weather improves, a reevaluation will be made.â
Last week, both the Philippines and China repositioned their ships posted at the shoal, easing tensions that had been building up since the standoff began in April.
Presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda called the coordinated pullback a âstep in the right direction.â
Weakened PH claim
But Bayan Muna Representative Neri Colmenares is worried that the premature departure of the Philippine vessels may have weakened the countryâs claim of sovereignty over that part of the West Philippine Sea.
Colmenares said Monday that China had shown no sign of reciprocating. âThe President should immediately replace the two boats that left the [shoal],â Colmenares said. âThe government only weakened its claim of effective control and jurisdiction if we have no naval presence in our waters.â
The Department of National Defense said on Sunday that the withdrawal of the two Philippine vessels would not affect the countryâs claim. There are many other ways of monitoring the area, according to the departmentâs spokesperson Peter Galvez.
Del Rosario had told the Inquirer that despite an easing of tensions between Manila and Beijing, the Philippines would press its plan to bring the dispute to the International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea. With reports from Gil C. Cabacungan and AFP
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Tags: China , DFA , Diplomacy , Foreign affairs , geopolitics , Global Nation , International relations , Maritime Dispute , Panatag Shoal , Philippines , Scarborough Shoal , Spratly Islands , territorial disputes , Territories , West Philippine Sea
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