OP-ED EDITORIAL: OPINION & CARTOON – ‘Our claims in the South China Sea ’ – Monday, April 16, 2018

3The Philippines is not giving up its claims in the South China Sea, Secretary of Foreign Affairs Alan Peter Cayetano said Wednesday in Hong Kong, after President Duterte attended the Boao Forum for Asia in Hainan, China, where he and China President Xi Jinping reaffirmed their readiness to work together for mutual development.

In June, 2016, the Philippines won its claim to some South China Sea islands in the United Nations-backed Arbitral Court in the Hague in a case filed by former President Benigno S. Aquino III, but upon his assumption to the presidency, President Duterte opted for a policy of cooperation with China at this time.

China claims sovereignty over 80 percent of the South China Sea, as defined by a nine-dash line looping around most of the sea, but intruding into the 200-mile Exclusive Economic Zone of the Philippines. It has stood firm on its claim to sovereignty in the face of the Arbitral Court’s decision – which the court cannot, however, enforce.

In the face of these conflicting claims, for which there is no solution except by war, the Philippines and China have chosen to find ways to cooperate and work together for mutual economic benefit. Thus at the recent Boao Forum, President Duterte declared the two countries will work together against terrorism, illegal drugs, and criminality. China is participating in the “Build, Build, Build” infrastructure program of the Philippines with a donation of two new bridges across the Pasig and funding for dam, irrigation, and railway projects. Plans are underway for joint exploration of mineral resources in the South China Sea.

The sea continues to be a major area of contention as there are other nations with conflicting claims on certain islands and reefs grouped in the Paracels in the north and Spratleys in the south. The sea is also a major route for ships bringing oil and other cargo to China, Korea, and Japan in the north. The United States is particularly determined to assert freedom of navigation in the area. Even now the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt is in the area after docking in Manila,

All these movements ignore or defy China’s claim to sovereignty over most of the South China Sea. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Brunei have their own claims. But as President Duterte said at the start of his administration, this is not the time for the Philippines to seek to enforce its claim as it would a mean a war we cannot win. There may be a time later when circumstances ard more propitious, he said, “but not now.”

Secretary Cayetano’s statement in Hong Kong last Wednesday should reassure those who fear the Philippines has forgotten its claims. Those claims are now particularly strong in view of the Arbitral Court decision. At some propitious time in the future, we are certain, the Philippines and China – and all the other countries with claims in the South China Sea – will come to an agreement that will be beneficial to all. /  Published 

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ASEANEWS EDITORIAL CARTOONS:.

7.1.   Finally a closure   – The Daily Tribune

7.2    Our claims in the South China Sea   –  The Manila Bulletin
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7.3.   Default setting –  The Manila Standard

7.4.   BAGUIO CITY   –  The Manila Times
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7.5.  Ignorance and greed    –  The Philippine Daily Inquirer

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7.6    Know your candidates   – The Philippine Star
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7.    Kailan kikilos sa mga biktima ng Dengvaxia?   – Pilipino Star Ngayon
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8.1.   Premium –  Sanctions are powerful but increasingly risky weapon.

                                                                            Jonathan Eyal -Europe Correspondent

Jonathan Eyal was born in Romania, but has lived most of his life in Britain. Educated at Oxford and London universities, his initial training was in international law and relations, in which he obtained both his first degree and his Master’s with a Distinction. His doctorate, completed at Oxford in 1987, analysed relations between ethnic minorities in Eastern Europe. After teaching at Oxford for three years, Dr Eyal was appointed a researcher at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies in London. Since 1990, Dr Eyal has been Director of Studies at the Institute. Dr Eyal has authored books on military relations in the Balkans and Eastern Europe, and became a regular commentator for The Guardian newspaper in London. He started writing for The Straits Times in 2001, and is currently the paper’s Europe Correspondent. He is fluent in French, Romanian, Italian, Hungarian and German.– For The Straits Times

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9.1.  Regime’s best-laid plans still subject to folly –
VEERA PRATEEPCHAIKUL FORMER EDITOR
– The Bangkok Post
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10.1   Keeping a balanced view on access to high places – Viet Nam News by Thu Trang
llustration by Trịnh Lập
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