From GMA News (Sep 3): China says it wants South China Sea solution but Manila sees worrying signs
BEIJING - China is serious about wanting a peaceful resolution to the bitter
dispute over the South China Sea, Premier Li Keqiang told Southeast Asian
leaders on Tuesday, but he signaled it was in no rush to sign a long-mooted
accord.
After years of resisting efforts by the 10-member Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to start talks on an agreement on maritime rules
governing behavior in the region, the so-called Code of Conduct, China has said
it would host talks between senior officials this month.
Friction over
the South China Sea, one of the world's most important waterways, has surged as
China uses its growing naval might to assert its vast claims over the oil- and
gas-rich sea more forcefully, raising fears of a military clash.
Four
ASEAN nations, including Vietnam and the Philippines, have overlapping claims
with China. Taiwan also claims parts of the sea and its numerous
islets.
China and the Philippines accuse each other of violating the
Declaration of Conduct (DoC), a non-binding confidence-building agreement on
maritime conduct signed by China and ASEAN in 2002.
Separately to Li's
comments, Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin accused China of violating the
informal DoC by building new structures in the Scarborough Shoal, part of the
area disputed by Beijing and Manila.
"We have ... sighted concrete blocks
inside the shoal which are a prelude to construction," Gazmin told a
congressional budget hearing in Manila, displaying air surveillance photos of
the group of rocks in the South China Sea.
He said the photos were taken
on Saturday, describing them as a worrying pattern of construction that would be
similar to the building of a garrison on Mischief Reef in the late
1990s.
Li, speaking at the opening of a China-ASEAN trade fair in the
southern Chinese city of Nanning, said China had always advocated talks on the
dispute on the basis of "respecting historical reality and international
law."
"The Chinese government is willing and ready to assume a policy of
seeking an appropriate resolution through friendly consultations," Li told the
audience, which included Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and Thai
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.
China would "proceed systematically
and soundly push forward talks on the Code of Conduct for the South China Sea,"
Li said without elaborating in comments aired live on state
television.
He also repeated that talks on the dispute should only be
carried out between the parties directly concerned, Beijing's standard line
which rejects the involvement of outside parties such as the United States or
multilateral forums.
Washington has not taken sides, but Secretary of
State John Kerry reiterated in Brunei in July the US strategic interest in
freedom of navigation through the busy sea and its desire to see a Code of
Conduct signed quickly.
Differences such as those between China and the
Philippines could be another obstacle to agreeing on a more comprehensive pact
because China has stressed that countries must first show good faith by abiding
by the DoC.
Critics say China is intent on cementing its claims over the
sea through its superior and growing naval might, and has little interest in
rushing to agree to a code of conduct.
Divisions among ASEAN over the
maritime dispute burst into the open a year ago when a summit chaired by Chinese
ally Cambodia failed to issue a closing communique for the first time in the
group's 45-year history.
http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/324800/news/nation/china-says-it-wants-south-china-sea-solution-but-manila-sees-worrying-signs
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.