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Philippines hosts first Asean Spratlys meet

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The Philippines is pushing for the setup of a “Joint Marine Peace Park” in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea), part of its fresh proposals that seek to ease tensions in the region by delineating disputed areas and replacing military forces with civilians representing the various claimant countries.

Manila’s proposals came under scrutiny as it began hosting Thursday a two-day meeting of Southeast Asian maritime experts.

The gathering, the first of its kind, was an attempt by the Philippines to present a unified regional policy in confronting China’s exclusive claim over all the islands in the region.

The meeting was limited to maritime and legal experts from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations(Asean), four members of which lay claims to the sea believed to be rich in oil.

The four claimants from Asean are the Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam and Brunei. The other rival claimants are longtime rivals China and Taiwan.

Not all

The Philippine proposal maintained that not the entire West Philippine Sea is subject to a dispute, but only the Spratly group of islands which are sought by all six claimants, and the Paracel Islands which are being contested by China, Vietnam and Taiwan.

China refers to the strategic body of water as the South China Sea.

The proposed peace park “could be established in the joint cooperation area, or JCA, for the six Spratlys claimant-countries,” according to a paper from the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), a copy of which was obtained by the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

“It would be a concrete implementation of the code of conduct (for Spratlys claimants) and a beginning of a more vigorous cooperation in the West Philippine Sea,” the paper said.

It noted that the code “would be specifically applied in the JCA” and “could be designed to prevent accidental military encounters through specific rules of engagement between and among the parties.”

Demilitarized

The DFA paper said the JCA could be “demilitarized,” with police or Coast Guard staff replacing military personnel.

On maritime areas outside the JCA, the report said “joint activities that could be undertaken include search and rescue, oil spill preparedness, marine scientific research, and other conservation projects.”

And to transform the West Philippine Sea from a region of conflict into a so-called zone of peace, freedom, friendship and cooperation, “the disputed areas must be clarified from the nondisputed waters,” the DFA said.

Once the disputed areas are delineated, claimants can decide to withdraw their troops, replace them with civilian forces and undertake joint research projects and disaster drills to boost trust, the proposal added.

For Manila, the disputed areas in the West Philippine Sea are “specific, determinable and measurable.”

These areas can be determined and measured, it said, by making distinctions between “territorial disputes” and “maritime claims,” specifying the geological features being claimed, and applying the rules governing them under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos).

In the Asean bloc, the Philippines together with Vietnam has been the most vocal party in the dispute. China, however, prefers bilateral negotiations with each claimant country.

Beijing protest

Two senior Philippine diplomats told The Associated Press (AP) that Beijing had protested the two-day meeting.

Beijing has also questioned why Asean should deal with the disputes as a group when the majority of its members are not claimants, the two diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters.

One of the diplomats said that if Asean can forge a common stand, the bloc would later try to get China’s concurrence.

A draft statement to be issued after the meeting indicated all the participants were inclined to support the Manila proposal, describing it as “consistent with international law.”

They would urge the claimant countries “to meet among themselves and explore the possibility of defining” the disputed areas for joint projects.

Binay’s doubts

They would endorse the proposal to senior Asean diplomats for political deliberation, according to the draft statement, a copy of which was seen by AP.

Resolving the dispute “may take centuries,” said Vice President Jejomar Binay while talking to reporters after delivering an opening speech to the delegates at the conference.

Binay noted in the speech that the sea—through which more than half of the world’s supertankers pass—has “become a source of tension, which threatens the security” of not only the vital sea lane but also the region and the world.

But segregating the disputed areas would be tough. The Philippines, for example, claims as its own a potentially gas-rich area called the Reed Bank, which lies off the province of Palawan.

China, however, contests that claim, and two Chinese patrol boats tried to drive away a Philippine oil exploration ship from the area in March.

The Philippines protested the incident as one of several intrusions by China into its territorial waters that reignited tensions in the first half of the year. With a report from AP

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Tags: ASEAN , China , Diplomacy , Foreign affairs , International relations , Joint Marine Peace Park , Maritime Dispute , South China Sea , Spratlys , West Philippine Sea

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  • Anonymous

    Mr. Binay should watch his words. He’s not president yet and he does not make foreign policy. Golly,  he’s already saying these steps will be futile even as our diplomats try to get this plan going.  

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_J4LWY3J3KY7DXNEDEM6RNU65EM kamikaze

      I agree with you, he is acting as if he has solutions to everything, just imagine a vice president contradicting his commander in chief, not a good picture to project outside the country.

  • Anonymous

    ….this is so funny…yes, replace the military outpost in the spratly islands with civilians…errr, how about replace them with ‘hippies’ singing kum-bah-yah….and by the way, while they’re enjoying the party in the beach, don’t forget to check-out from time to time the other islands occupied by sneaky barstards as they might be starting to renovate and expand again ( remember the fisherman’s hut that became a fortress?)….

  • Anonymous

    VP Binay assessment is correct. Come on myk1984, China is the main protagonist in this dispute and yet its not even agreeing on the conference itself much more on the ’proposal’ and besides this will work against the PH since it will lose our ability to escalate the dispute to UNCLOS once this agreement materialized (mind you, this will drag for years just to come up with agreeable and actionable policy for each claimant)….I would say let the status quo remains, increase our capability in depending our territories (EEZ) and bring the dispute to every world forum while strengthening our existing mutual defence treaty with US.

  • Anonymous

    This is what you get from VP Binay, a sour pessimism? Heck he may be a good lawyer but I doubt if he is a good leader. How can you rally people’s support with attitude like that? Is he playing to the Chinese card? I’m really disappointed. 

  • http://joboni96.myopenid.com/ joboni96

    VERY GOOD MOVE
    let’s include taiwan
    but expect tsina to play ndf/npa card
    kaya consensus with the ndf group is important

    also japan and south korea

    continue with unclos process

    continue strengthening defensive posture
    proc tsina only understands power
    leverage local piltsin community

  • Anonymous

    This is a good start for the adoption of the North Sea model where
    countries bordering the stormy North Sea like UK, Norway, Denmark,
    Germany and the Netherlands agreed peacefully and subdivided the North
    Sea according to the geographical scope of their EEZ, to explore,
    exploit and develop their respective areas! It was done under the
    auspices of the UNCLOS!
    On a bilateral term for Joint Exploration and Exploitation under RP investment laws (60/40), one item that should be included is the withdrawal of Chinese troops from Mischief Reef which is deep into the Phil EEZ very proximate to Palawan like a dagger pointed to the heart.. This is to show good faith and sincerity of China in seeking for a peaceful resolution of the conflict in the Spratly area.

  • Anonymous

    High hopes on this. Every nation should be a team player.

  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/XJDE6MRAG2IUFSDJTYY23WLUQE Romeo

    Let me be the spoiler . The race to occupy more islands is on.
    Bottomline play for China , is to share on something that is 450 miles away !.

    I hope China rremembers how  it was treated    when it was weak.  Invaders cut up thier land,  exploited its resources , and bambozed its citizens.  Remember the rape of Nanking ? Boxers revellion.

    Now , the shoe is on the other  foot.  Soon China may be like Japan searching for raw materials to feed its billion people. Different from Japan in WW II ?   Team player ?  Maybe not.

    China acts like the same bully today.

    Will China remember  how it was treated then and how he is treating the Philippines today ? 
    And To think 75 % ( somehow ) of  Filipinos  have Chinese blood !

    Remember , Palawan is a stones throw away !



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