From Rappler (Jan 13):
Taiwan hits China fishing law, dismisses PH claim
DISPUTED ISLANDS. An aerial photo shows Pag-asa (Thitu) Island,
part of the disputed Spratly group of islands, in the South China Sea located
off the coast of western Philippines
on July 20, 2011. File photo by Rolex dela Peña/Pool/AFP
Like the Philippines, Taiwan rejected China's new fisheries law on
Monday, January 13. At the same time, however, it dismissed Manila's
claim over the disputed South China Sea.
Taiwan, which calls
itself the Republic of China (ROC), stood firm in claiming the
Spratly Islands
3 days after the
Philippines
slammed the Chinese law. The policy requires foreigners to
seek
China's
permission to fish in the disputed sea.
In a statement by the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in the Philippines, Taiwan
said the Spratly Islands
(Nansha Islands),
Paracel Islands
(Shisha Islands),
Macclesfield Islands
(Chungsha Islands),
and Pratas Islands
(Tungsha Islands) all belong to “the sovereignty
of the ROC government.”
The claim covers all “their surrounding waters and respective seabed and
subsoil.” This is based on “the perspectives of history, geography, and
international law.”
“Therefore, the ROC government reasserts that it enjoys all rights over the
islands and their surrounding waters, and thus its official and private vessels
should also enjoy freedom of navigation and operation in the said waters.
Furthermore, it cannot accept any claim of sovereignty over, occupation, or
legitimate regulation of these areas by other countries or territories,” Taiwan said.
The
Philippines, on the
other hand, asserted its claim over the Spratlys as well as other portions of
the sea, which it calls the
West Philippine Sea.
It filed a historic case against
China over this in 2013. (READ:
PH lawyer on China: Being 'int'l outlaw' has its price)
Joint exploration
In its statement, Taiwan
also urged countries “bordering the islands,” such as the Philippines,
“to respect the principles and spirit” of the United Nations Charter and the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). It also requested
them “to refrain from adopting unilateral measures that might upset the peace
and stability of the region and the South China Sea.”
In place of unilateral measures, Taiwan broached the idea of joint
exploration. It said it “upholds the basic principles of 'safeguarding
sovereignty, shelving disputes, peace and reciprocity, and joint exploration'
and remains willing to work with other countries in exploring the resources of
the South China Sea.”
“The ROC government also urges the countries bordering the South China Sea
to exercise self-constraint so that peaceful resolutions to South
China Sea disputes can be reached through consultation and
dialogue. The ROC government remains willing to participate in dialogue aiming
to form resolutions to disputes and promote regional peace, stability, and
freedom of navigation,” Taiwan
added.
The
Philippines, for its
part, said it has requested
China
“to immediately clarify” the new fisheries law that the Hainan Provincial
People's Congress issued.
“We are gravely concerned by this new regulation that would require foreign
fishing vessels to obtain approval from Chinese regional authorities before
fishing or surveying in a large portion of the South China Sea,” the
Philippines' Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said in a statement Friday,
January 10.
“This development escalates tensions, unnecessarily complicates the
situation in the
South China Sea, and
threatens the peace and stability of the region,” the DFA added.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/47870-taiwan-china-fisheries-law-philippines
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