Philippines to raise China dispute at ASEAN summit

Philippines to raise China dispute at ASEAN summit
Updated 10 May 2014
Follow

Philippines to raise China dispute at ASEAN summit

Philippines to raise China dispute at ASEAN summit

MANILA: Philippine President Benigno Aquino III said Saturday that he would raise his country’s territorial dispute with China at a meeting of Southeast Asian leaders and call for support to resolve the conflict through international arbitration.
In a statement issued before departing for the 24th Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in Myanmar, Aquino said dialogue between two countries is not enough to settle issues that also affect others in the region.
The Philippines presented evidence in March to an international tribunal against China’s sweeping territorial claims in the South China Sea, ignoring Beijing’s warning that the case would damage bilateral ties.
Manila brought its territorial dispute with China to international arbitration in January 2013 after Chinese government ships took control of a shoal claimed by the Philippines.
“Let us uphold and follow the rule of law in resolving territorial disputes in order to give due recognition and respect to the rights of all nations,” Aquino said in his statement. “We cannot rely just on dialogues between only two nations to settle issues that affect others in the region.”
In addition to the Philippines and Myanmar, ASEAN also includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
In the latest spat between the Philippines and China, Filipino maritime police arrested 11 Chinese fishermen who allegedly illegally collected more than 300 endangered marine turtles in a disputed shoal close to the western province of Palawan. Manila has ignored Beijing’s demands to release the fishermen and their boat apprehended early last week by the police at the Half Moon Shoal.
Last month, Chinese coast guard vessels tried to stop Philippine marines from resupplying and bringing fresh troops to a grounded ship now being used as the country’s outpost and symbol of sovereignty at the disputed shoal.
The Philippines could invite even stronger Chinese protests after the Department of Energy announced Friday that it was ready to accept applications to explore for oil and gas in the Reed Bank off Palawan. The area is near where Chinese patrol ships tried to drive away a Philippine exploration vessel in March 2011. A Philippine general deployed two air force planes, but the Chinese ships had left by the time the aircraft reached the contested area.