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Philippine envoy to UN stresses ‘rule of law’ in resolving int’l disputes

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MANILA, Philippines—Without referring to China and the Spratlys dispute in the West Philippine Sea (or South China Sea), the Philippines’ deputy permanent representative to the United Nations called on UN member-states to adhere to the rule of law in the resolution of international conflicts.

A copy of the speech of Ambassador Carlos Sorreta made available to the media on Tuesday and delivered during a Security Council meeting at the UN headquarters in New York, emphasized that the rule of law “has a central role in the settlement of disputes, whether in terms of method or substance.”

Sorreta also stressed that “while there is a need to continue working together to rebuild societies ravaged by conflicts, the international community also needs to continue to work as one to prevent the escalation of conflicts between states by respecting the rule of law.”

At the same time, the envoy pointed out that “time and again, conflicts – ideological, political, military and territorial – have arisen when the rule of law is weak.”

For his part, Ambassador Libran Cabactulan, Manila’s permanent representative to the UN, noted that the Philippine position “brought to the fore another aspect of the rule of law which should rightly be given equal emphasis.”

“The rule of law has largely been seen in the context of post-conflict scenarios when all too often the tragic price in terms of the loss of human lives and in destruction has already been paid,” he said.

According to Cabactulan, “we need to broaden and enrich the debate in the UN on the rule of law to include conflict prevention and dispute resolution. We must not tire in the efforts to prevent international conflicts.”

He also reminded the international community about its obligation to “comply with the UN charter, particularly on the peaceful settlement of disputes, as well as UN General Assembly resolutions, including Resolution 37/10, which adopted the 1982 Manila Declaration on the Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes.”

“These obligations and commitments are spelled out clearly and reiterated throughout international instruments and General Assembly resolutions. We need to abide by and renew our pledge to these commitments, otherwise we go against the raison d’etre as members of the UN,” the diplomat added.

Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario has repeatedly asserted that a rules-based approach would provide the key to securing the country’s claims to the Spratlys and advancing the peaceful settlement of disputes in the West Philippine Sea.

Del Rosario said the country’s policy in the disputed waters has been “grounded on an unwavering adherence to international law,” particularly the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

“For the Philippines, certainly the primacy of international law is the cornerstone on which we define and protect our territory and maritime entitlements in the West Philippine Sea,” he also said.

He added, “It behooves the Philippines to embrace this imperative to the fullest, and we expect nothing less from our international partners,” referring to the other Spratlys claimants – China, Vietnam, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei Darussalam.

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Tags: ambassadors , Carlos Sorreta , China , Diplomacy , Global Nation , Philippines , South China Sea , Spratlys , territorial disputes , United Nations , West Philippine Sea

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  • David Liu

    Well. China had owned the islands in South China Sea for centuries before the UNCLOS was established and before Philippine became independent.   UNCLOS cannot take Chnese right away because that right is prior to UNCLOS.

    • Anonymous

      What right has China  to claim territories in southeast asian waters, this is not mainland China where China can just willy nilly claim territories belonging to the Southeast Asian People. China has no more right than the western colonizers who have claimed and occupied Southeast Asia for centuries and mind you they didn’t just claimed it because they have flimsy old maps or arbitrarily drawm a line across an entire seas or because of a revisionist claims. The western colonizers have claimed Southeast Asia and occupied it for centuries but in all those times that they have occupied the region, there was no doubts who the real owners of the territories, it is does not belong to the colonizer or China, but it belongs to the Southeast Asian inhabitants.  China has no business claiming territories that lies in Southeast Asian Waters.  China needs to stay within it’s border and stop stealing territories belonging to the Southeast Asians.  The Southeast Asians has already rejected the occupation of the Western Colonizers, the Southeast Asian People does not need to deal with another land grabbing China.

  • Anonymous

     No, its you who got it wrong. China owns NOTHING.  China claiming to owned virtually the entire seas is ridiculous and outright thievery, never mind that there are several nations in the immediate vicinity who has the more right to claim the seas than any other since they are the real owners of these southeast asian waters.  These southeast asian waters has been and is part of the traditional territorial domain of the southeast asian people, which has always been that way even long before any chinese or western colonial powers had ever laid any claim on it.  China cannot claim what it does not own in the first place. This is southeast asia and china must keep it’s hands off from other nation’s territories. China do not own nor has any right to claim ownership of territories belonging to the Southeast Asian people.



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