Philippine Daily Inquirer
9:52 pm | Tuesday, June 19th, 2012
MANILA, Philippines â" Malacañang expects the countryâs diplomats to clarify with their Chinese counterparts conflicting statements over the status of Chinese vessels in Scarborough Shoal.
Abigail Valte, President Benigno Aquino IIIâs deputy spokesperson, said on Tuesday it would be the Department of Foreign Affairsâ task to find out whether the Chinese would stay in the disputed shoal in spite of bad weather.
âWe will defer to the DFA to respond to that particular issue. I did see the statement that was reported this morning. Given the sensitivity of the matter, we will defer to DFA for the appropriate response to that,â Valte said, stressing that the Philippines wanted to deescalate tensions.
The Philippines has always acted within its commitment to pursue the resolution of the issue through diplomatic means, she said. The goal has always been to restore normalcy, she added.
Asked if there was a need to reinstate the Philippinesâ presence in Scarborough Shoal following recent Chinese statements indicating they did not intend to leave the area, Valte said, âThe resolution of that question will properly be for the reevaluation of the situation.â
The Philippines pulled out its vessels from the shoal because of an approaching storm. The DFA later announced that China had done the same. But Chinese officials later denied that they had withdrawn from the area.
Asked if the Philippine vessels would return to the shoal, Valte said: âI donât want to preempt our actions at the moment⦠We will be able to advise you as soon as the reevaluation is made or if we have something concrete that we can share with you. As of the moment, we have not been advised by the DFA when the reevaluation is going to take placeâ"what specific time or date.â
As for the pictures of Chinese raising their flag at the shoal, Valte said, âWe are yet to verify that.â
In an e-mailed statement on Tuesday, Chinese Embassy spokesperson Zhang Hua said the picture published in the Philippine Daily Inquirerâs front page on Tuesday was taken in the 1980s when a Chinese ocean expedition team was conducting a survey in the area.
Brushing aside suggestions that the photograph was a projection of Chinese power, Zhang said that China had been sending expeditions to the area since 1977, the latest in 2007.
Beijing refers to the shoal as Huangyan Island, while Manila calls it Panatag Shoal and Bajo de Masinloc.
âI hereby want to reiterate that Huangyan Island is Chinaâs inherent territory. The picture on Inquirer itself only serves to prove, once again, Chinaâs effective administration and sovereignty over Huangyan Island over a long period of time in history,â Zhang said.
Sen. Gregorio Honasan said on Tuesday, that the Philippines might have  âmiscalculated Chinaâ in withdrawing two ships from Scarborough Shoal without the benefit of a third-party mediator.
In an interview with the Inquirer, Honasan pointed to the pivotal role played by a third-party body to monitor Chinaâs compliance with the so-called agreement between Manila and Beijing to ease tension in the West Philippine Sea.
âItâs a miscalculation of Chinaâs skill and leverage in the ongoing negotiations which is still manageable in the long term,â he said.
âBut letâs avoid repeating these mistakes. Letâs not be too impulsive in withdrawing (the countryâs symbolic resistance) to Chinaâs incursions,â he added.
On orders from President Aquino, a Philippine Coast Guard vessel and a Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources survey withdrew from the shoal over the weekend.
Honasan asserted that the President or his foreign policy advisers might have overlooked the fact that China, an emerging economic and military superpower, would only listen to a third party tasked by both sides to monitor the withdrawal of vessels.
The senator named the United Nations, United Statesâ"which wants to reassert its role as a Pacific powerâ"and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations as third-party brokers.
âThis is no longer a local, national, or even a regional issue. This is a global issue since that whoever owns the area has control over international shipping lanes and even airspace,â he said, explaining that the dispute impacts on the rights of navigation and passage of foreign vessels as contained in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos).
Asked if the country had been duped into withdrawing from the shoal, Honasan said: âWhen you deal with a country like Chinaâ"an emerging economic giant and world power, with a 5,000-year-old historyâ"you prepare; you donât drop your guard; you apply all your diplomatic and tactical skills.â
Join us on
Recent Stories:
Tags: China , Diplomacy , Foreign affairs , geopolitics , Global Nation , International relations , Philippines , Scarborough Shoal , Spratly Islands , territorial disputes , Territories
Factual errors? Contact the Philippine Daily Inquirer's day desk. Believe this article violates journalistic ethics? Contact the Inquirer's Reader's Advocate. Or write The Readers' Advocate:

No comments:
Post a Comment