From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Nov 29): PH refuses to stamp Chinese e-passports
The Philippines will no longer stamp its visas on China’s new electronic
passports, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) announced Wednesday.
“This action is being undertaken to avoid the Philippines being misconstrued
as legitimizing the nine-dash line (claim) every time a Philippine visa is
stamped on such Chinese e-passport,” it said in a statement. “Instead, the Philippines will stamp it on a separate visa application form,”
it added. The Philippines had earlier lodged its protest against China’s recent move to
issue new e-passports stamped with a map that declared disputed West Philippine
Sea (South China Sea) territories as part of its borders. China, through its
nine-dash claim, has consistently argued that it had sovereignty over nearly the
entire sea. In its statement, the DFA said that the country’s refusal to stamp its visas
on the new Chinese e-passports reinforces its stand that China’s claim over the
disputed areas was “excessive,” and was “inconsistent with international law,
specifically the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos).
Vietnam had earlier expressed its refusal to stamp the new Chinese
e-passports, with its authorities noting that border guards had been instructed
to issue “stapled visas” to Chinese people with such passports..... The United States, meanwhile, had also said it will raise concerns with
Beijing over China’s latest move, saying that the map printed in the new Chinese
passports was causing “tension and anxiety” among claimant states in the
disputed West Philippine Sea (South China Sea). State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland was quoted by the Associated
Press (AP) as saying that it was up to countries to decide what their passports
look like and the US would still accept the Chinese one as a legal document.
But she added: “That’s a different matter than whether it’s politically smart
or helpful to be taking steps that antagonize countries.” She said it was unhelpful for creating an environment for resolving the
territorial disputes.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/58123/ph-refuses-to-stamp-chinese-e-passports
Have noted in recent years the PLA military build up, acquisition of an aircraft carrier and training in carrier operations, more assertive behavior regarding conflicting territorial claims with Japan in East China Sea, and more assertive action regarding conflicting territorial claims with Philippines, Vietnam and others in the South China Sea. Just recently China attempted to use Cambodia to ram its views on resolving conflicting territorial claims in the SCS during the recent ASEAN meeting in Phnom Penh. And now it has issued a propaganda passport that delineates its territorial claims in the SCS. Meanwhile China loudly claims that regional states and the world have nothing to from Chinese actions. Don’t believe the hype. As the Chinese ability to project military power grows, expect ever increasing aggressiveness with regard to its territorial claims in the region. This Chinese passport stunt is a portent of things to come in the future.
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