From the Philippine News Agency (Mar 31):
US Reaffirms Support for PHL arbitration
The United States has
renewed its support to the Philippines’
move to bring its territorial disputes with China before an international
tribunal, calling it a “peaceful means” to resolving maritime row.
Washington’s statement of support issued by
the U.S. State Department came after the Philippines
submitted on March 30 a 4,000-page document or memorial containing an array of
legal evidence and maps that will bolster its case against China.
“The United States
reaffirms its support for the exercise of peaceful means to resolve maritime
disputes without fear of any form of retaliation, including intimidation or
coercion,” the State Department statement said.
All countries, it added, “should respect the right of any States Party,
including the Republic of the Philippines,
to avail themselves of the dispute resolution mechanisms provided for under the
Law of the Sea Convention.”
“We hope that this case serves to provide greater legal certainty and
compliance with the international law of the sea,” it said.
China claims the South
China Sea nearly in its entirety, including areas that are within
Manila’s territorial waters that have been renamed
West Philippine Sea.
Manila took a bold step on January 2013 when
it filed a case against
China
before a United Nations-linked international tribunal in a bid to declare
Beijing’s sea claims
excessive. A five-man court that was assembled to hear the case ordered the
Philippines to
submit a memorial on or before March 30 to substantiate its complaint.
The U.S., a Philippine defense ally, maintains it does not take sides in the
disputes but has declared that it is in its national interest to ensure freedom
of navigation in the South China Sea and that the disputes are resolved
peacefully in accordance with international law, particularly the U.N.
Convention on the Law of the Sea.
Vietnam,
Malaysia,
Brunei
and
Taiwan
are also claimants to the resource-rich waters, a major trade route where oil
and gas deposits have recently been discovered.
It is expected of
China
to submit a counter memorial under international arbitration procedures.
However,
Beijing
stated that it will not participate in the legal process.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=630901
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