MANILA, Philippines—Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin on Saturday twitted activists for their silence on the country’s territorial dispute with China, while they loudly protest the Philippines’ new defense cooperation agreement with the United States.
“Our problem is we keep on complaining [about] the Enhanced Defense Cooperation (with the US). Why don’t we complain when the Chinese [used] water [cannons] on us? Why? Nasaan ang pagka-Pilipino natin (Where is our Filipino spirit)? We demonstrate against those who are helping us but we don’t demonstrate against those who are bullying us,” Gazmin said in Filipino.
“This fight [for territory], it’s not only the leaders who are involved. It’s all the Filipinos. It’s the problem of the Filipinos. This is not just a problem of President Aquino. It is a problem of Juan, a problem of Pedro,” Gazmin told reporters on the sidelines of the 117th anniversary of the Philippine Army at Fort Bonifacio.
Gazmin said the Department of Foreign Affairs was the government agency tasked with answering questions about the country’s moves to address the dispute with China over the Ayungin Shoal in the Spratlys.
But he could not help but wonder out loud why some Filipino activists were protesting the Philippines’ Enhanced Defense Cooperation with the US but were quiet when it came to the maritime row with China.
The Philippines will file a memorial, or a written pleading, on the West Philippine Sea territorial dispute with China before the United Nations Arbitral Tribunal on March 30.
China has refused to participate in the arbitration proceeding, insisting the dispute should be resolved bilaterally with the Philippines.
Last week, Chinese coast guard ships blocked a Filipino vessel on its way to Ayungin Shoal to deliver food supplies to the Marines stationed there.
The Marines are on a rusty naval hospital ship that was grounded on the shoal in 1999 to mark the Philippines’ territory.
The Agreement on Enhanced Defense Cooperation (formerly known as the Framework Agreement for Increased Rotational Presence) being hammered out by the Philippines and the US is widely seen as a deterrent to China’s increasing aggression in connection with its territorial claims in the South China Sea.
The working draft of the new security deal would allow for an increased US military presence in the country and access to the Philippines’ military bases. Philippine authorities, on the other hand, would have access to US facilities set up inside the local military bases.
Gazmin on Saturday said the Philippines and the US were working on the final details of the agreement.
US President Barack Obama is scheduled to visit the Philippines in April.
RELATED STORIES
Activists protest gov’t inaction vs price hikes
Aquino: China’s rulers like Hitler
China tightens air defense zone, warns foreign planes