Aerial view of Pagasa island, the main island in the Philippines' Kalayaan Island Group. Work on an air strip will be among those affected by a new policy halting all construction work in order not to affect Manila's case against Beijing in a UN arbitral tribunal. INTERAKSYON.COM FILE
The Philippines has stopped all development work in the disputed South China Sea because of the impact such activity might have on an arbitration complaint it has filed against China, a defense official said on Friday.
The Philippines
has called for all countries to stop construction work
on small islands and reefs in the South China Sea, virtually all of which is
claimed by China .
The Philippines
and other Southeast Asian also have claims in the resource-rich sea, through
which passes $5 trillion of trade a year.
Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin told a budget hearing at
the upper house of Congress that President Benigno Aquino had ordered a halt to
all development plans, including repair of an airstrip, in the Spratly Islands .
"We do have funds for the improvement of, for example,
the Pagasa airport but this is being held in abeyance because of the case that
we have filed," Gazmin told senators looking into a defense budget of 141
billion pesos($3.14 billion).
The Philippines ,
a close US ally, has brought a case to the UN arbitral court in The Hague , seeking
clarification on its entitlements under the UN Convention on the Law of the
Sea.
Gazmin said the Philippines had stopped all its
construction activities in the Spratlys because it wanted to maintain the moral
high ground in terms of the territorial dispute.
The Philippines
said China has been
reclaiming land to expand its territories in the South
China Sea . Taiwan
has been building a new port while Malaysia
and Vietnam
are also making improvements to their facilities.
The Philippines '
military has proposed various work to air and sea facilities as well the
construction of accommodation, lighthouses and radar stations.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/96637/philippines-halts-work-in-disputed-south-china-sea
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.