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Australia backs Philippines on Spratlys bid

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US President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama welcome President Aquino at the opening dinner of the Apec Leaders Summit in Honolulu. AP

HONOLULU—President Benigno Aquino III on Saturday received Australia’s support for the Philippines’ move to declare the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) as a zone of peace, freedom, friendship and cooperation.

Mr. Aquino met with Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit, according to presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda.

“(The) Australian prime minister just mentioned that 20 percent of their exports pass through the West Philippine Sea. Basically, that’s it and the President spoke on the solution of the West Philippine Sea being a zone of peace, freedom, friendship and cooperation,” Lacierda said in a news briefing.

Asked whether there was an expression of support, Lacierda said, “Yes, yes.”

Foreign Undersecretary Laura del Rosario, who attended the bilateral meeting, said Gillard also lauded Mr. Aquino’s efforts to promote transparency and accountability.

“The Australian prime minister congratulated or applauded the President on his governance initiatives, in all his steps that he has taken to make sure that, he called it technical corruption, is also being addressed and that resources are being freed to address our need,” Del Rosario said.

Del Rosario said Gillard asked Mr. Aquino to visit Australia possibly in mid-2012.

Asked about the invitation, the President told reporters on Saturday, “We’re working on it.”

Gas deposits

Energy Secretary Jose Rene Almendras on Saturday also elaborated on the President’s statement on Friday about the discovery of substantial gas deposits.

“We’re talking about Recto Bank, which really is not in the Spratlys area,” said Almendras, a member of the Philippine delegation to the Apec summit.

He told reporters that Forum Energy, the contract service provider in the area, had been conducting seismic testing in the area. “The exploration has been continuing,” he said.

On Friday, Mr. Aquino said that the gas fields included disputed areas in the West Philippine Sea and that the deposits there “dwarfs” the Malampaya oil fields. The President said operations there would begin next year.

But Almendras clarified on Saturday that the Philippines’ gas fields were outside the Spratlys.

He also said that Manila would honor its agreement with its fellow claimants over disputed territories.

Seismic evaluation

“In the terms of China, depending on what they claim to be their basis of their claims, some of these areas will be questioned but as far as the acknowledged contested area is concerned by all of the parties involved whether China agrees to it or not is really the Spratlys area,” Almendras said.

The gas fields in the Recto Bank, Almendras said, showed “very good results on seismic evaluation and even previous wells that were dug as early as 1976 (and) are not in the Spratlys area.”

The President, in his State of the Nation Address this year, made an unequivocal claim over Recto Bank, saying being in the area is like being on CM Recto Avenue in Manila.

China, however, is also claiming the bank as one of its territories. Aside from the Philippines and China, claimants over the Spratlys include Vietnam and Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei.

During a session of the Apec CEO Summit on commodity security, Mr. Aquino told a panel that work in a gas-rich area would commence next year.

Almendras clarified the President’s earlier statement that the area would be in northern Philippines. He said the area of Recto Bank lay just north of Palawan.

“This is not in the contested area,” Almendras said.

He acknowledged that the area was “a new field,” as Mr. Aquino said, because it has yet to go into the “development mode.”

New gas fields

The President referred to the new gas fields during a session on commodity security of the Apec CEO Summit when asked what his government was doing to address cost of electricity in the country—one of the highest in the region.

“There are substantial gas deposits that we believe are already in the proven scale at this point in time that will dwarf the Malampaya oil fields. Some of them are in areas that are part of the contentious disputes as to sovereignty over the same.”

He said his government was working on “steps to determine as to who actually owns them consistent with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.”

“We are hoping that all the signatories to the United Nations convention will adhere to the stipulations of the convention,” Mr. Aquino said.

He said this included the 370-kilometer (200-mile) exclusive economic zone, “which clearly shows that the areas in dispute are in our favor.”

The President said the Philippines could go for arbitration to settle the matter “once and for all and to have these resources benefit not only our country but our neighbors in the region.”

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Tags: Apec Summit , Australia , China , Foreign affairs , Global Nation , International relations , Maritime Dispute , Philippines , Spratlys

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  • Anonymous

    pnoy’s smile shows that he has the right and that he’s been truly elected through an honest & credible elections and thus a legitimate president of the republic of ph! 

    unlike the smile of one who is now perceived to be an illegal occupant of malacañang for almost a decade? to her supporters & defenders, i am …..sorry!

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_5STEU22AD7YRHQSB6RE56ZDSYA J

    “Foreign Undersecretary Laura del Rosario, who attended the bilateral meeting, said Gillard also lauded Mr. Aquino’s efforts to promote transparency and accountability.”

    - We got to get out fo this (http://www.cnbc.com/id/45128939/) situation of PH as one of the top-10 worst countries to do business with.

  • Anonymous

    Baka mamya nyan China will claim sa kanila daw buong Pilipinas. Ibigay kaya natin ang Basilan

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_PBOZBBLRVEOTWHXEXOAXJR3Q3Y Dana

        Just get a map and look at it.  A grade schooler will tell you. By proximity, the Philippines own the Spratlys and Recto bank. Period.  China who lives so, so far away, is claiming it too.  Nobody respects us because our military is almost non-existent.  Countries way poorer than we are have better military equipments  than us!  The military is the backbone of any country.  In the Spratlys issue, we have no other friends but ourselves. The U.S. builds the military of countries like Israel, Colombia and Mexico ($1.6-billion worth of US military equipment.).  China will soon rebound the US militarily. Some of the US military spare parts were already made in China.
        When China gets access to oil in Spratlys they won’t need the middle east anymore. That’s why Spratlys oil issue is very important to China.  The U.S.  must make us a military power in the area to reckon with.   Another threat to the area is Taiwan.They occupied the largest island complete with fortifications. Mr. Cloma  found that island first.  He planted the Philippine flag all over the big island. Then left for Manila to claim it in Philippine courts. Then Marcos and Enrile heard about it. When the Tomas Cloma team came back, a Taiwanese destroyer was already there and they pulled out the Philippine flags.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_PBOZBBLRVEOTWHXEXOAXJR3Q3Y Dana

    Chinese spies in the  Philippines.  Same thing happenned during the time prior to the Japanese invasion.  My father is still a young boy. He noticed Japanese citizens in the Philippines pretending to be poor. Yung iba mambobote, newspaper vendor, sidewalk vendor and making friends with the locals.  Then,  they invaded !!!! 

    • Anonymous

      While this is clearly off-tangent, I’ve heard stories of spies and collaborators being murdered like dogs from some of the old folks who saw it happen way back then. Those spies and their traitor friends were rooted out, tortured for information, and killed; and anyone who tried to protect them suffered the same fate they did. That’s what you do to spies and the traitor scum working for them.

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_WYAZBOJYIUCRLWTYJBORBVTTOI boyfarmer

      You are wrong, Japanese migrated to the Philippines before the second world war in search for opportunities, for jobs and investments. Japanese developed Davao City. from 10 laborers japanese population ballooned to 20,000. Then Davao came to be called “Little Tokyo”. When war came japanese male were called to service as most of them were reservists ready to serve the emperor whom they thought was divine. Just like us, some filipinos are reservist. In time of war they will be called to active duty. Our seamen who works in the international maritime industry are naval reservist. In times of war some of them will become naval personnel.

      Spies? yes they exist also, chinese industrial spies steal western technology, copy it and make it their own, that is why the west or american business is hurting.

      greedy china

  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/S42XIXNLXWDSOTMCWNUB6CRGQU DoDong

    picture, picture… parang manila zoo lang

  • Anonymous

    Pag ganong klase ang pag claim ng China, dapat hanggang Indonesia ay magclaim nalang. Total bara bara naman ang sistema sa pagclaim. Bakuran ng may bakuran ay gustong sakupin. Mag claim nalang ang China kung hanggang sa-an makarating ang paningin nila.

  • Anonymous

    Ganda ng picture. mga pare parehong palpak na pinuno, nagsama sama. hehehe

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_WYAZBOJYIUCRLWTYJBORBVTTOI boyfarmer

      ikaw ang palpak, ano ba ang achievements mo?

  • Anonymous

    he looks like baby bonjing in the middle…

  • Anonymous

    Where is West Philippine Sea?  My book in World Geography says that this body of water is called South China Sea.  My Google Map also says this is South China Sea.

    Okay, let us just rename in AbNoy Sea.



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