Diplomacy should settle this problem someday

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2019 06:05:07 +0000

 

EDITORIAL edt

SCARBOROUGH Shoal – also known to us as Panatag and Bajo de Masinloc – keeps popping up in news about disputes and conflicts in the South China Sea.

It is a group of reefs and rocks around a lagoon, a rich fishing area long frequented by fish­ermen from many nations. China claims the shoal by virtue of a 1279 Yuan Dynasty map. The Philippines claims it with a 1734 map showing it under the sovereignty of Spanish Philippines. In 1949, China produced a map claiming as its territory 80 percent of the South China Sea enclosed by a nine-dash line, with Scarborough within the area enclosed by the easternmost line.

In 2012, Philippine and Chinese ships confronted each other in the area and the United States mediated, asking both sides to withdraw. The Philippine ships did, but the Chinese did not. This led to the filing of the Philippine complaint in the Arbitral Court in The Hague on the United Na­tions Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). The court ruled in 2016 that China’s claim to most of the South China Sea has no legal basis, but the court did not rule on the other nations’ claims. As for Scarborough, the court said, it is a traditional fishing ground that should remain open to the fishermen of various nations.

Scarborough is located 221 kilometers west of Palauig, Zambales; it is thus with the 200-mile “Exclusive Economic Zone” (EEZ) of the Philippines under the UNCLOS. But the EEZ waters are not Philippine territory. What UNCLOS conferred was the exclusive right to exploit any resources, possibly oil or gas, in the land beneath the sea.

Last week, Supreme Court Justice Antonio Carpio expressed fears that China may act in the final three years of the Duterte administration to take over Scarborough, just before an agreement on a Code of Conduct is made with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Malacañang, through presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo, quickly responded that President Duterte will not allow this to happen. Then Chinese Ambassador Zhao Jianhua joined in with the statement that “we do not need to reclaim it.”

Thus, after a new round of opinions and beliefs, charges and replies, we are back to the original situation of uncertainty. Both China and the Philippines
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