Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario urged the Association
of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)to take a stand on China ’s massive reclamation works on disputed
areas in the South China Sea , warning that
such activities could eventually threaten all 10 members of the regional bloc.
It was the first major call of the Philippines on the ASEAN, which is currently
chaired by Malaysia , to take
a definitive and stronger stand on the issue since the scale of China ’s ongoing
construction was revealed last year.
Four ASEAN members - Brunei ,
Malaysia , the Philippines and Vietnam
–have been locked in long-simmering territorial rifts in the West Philippine
Sea, also known as South China Sea . China and Taiwan
are also involved in the disputes, which have long been feared as Asia ’s next potential flashpoint for a major armed
conflict.
“Now is the time for ASEAN to come together,” said Del
Rosario at the bloc’s ministerial meeting in Kota Kinabalu on Wednesday. “Our
inaction on this would undermine the principle of centrality, since we are
unable to address in a collective and unified manner such a critical issue in
our own backyard.”
In his address, Del Rosario also lamented ASEAN’s failure to
fully implement a non-binding accord it signed with China in 2002 to stifle tensions
and plans to craft a legally binding pact to prevent the territorial conflicts
from degenerating by enacting rules that would discourage aggression.
“Let us pause for a moment to assess the significance of
these massive reclamation projects, all of which are appearing to be near
completion as portrayed by available photos,” Del Rosario said.
China’s construction, he said, “looks like it is part of a
step by step realization of China’s illegal nine-dash line” -- a U-shaped encirclement
that covers the breadth of Beijing’s claim in the waters.
ASEAN has been criticized for failing to take stronger and
rapid steps to ease the territorial conflicts in the South China Sea, which has
been renamed West Philippine Sea by Manila .
Analysts see division among its members in their political
alliances between Asian powerhouse China
and the United States , which
has been trying to reassert its influence in the Asia-Pacific region after
several years of pre-occupation in the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan .
The Philippines
and Vietnam , on the other
hand, have separately increased their military engagements with Washington as they confronted China in a number of incidents in
the disputed waters.
Del Rosario, who is leading the Philippine delegation in Malaysia , warned fellow ASEAN ministers that China ’s
reclamation is “a threat to freedom of navigation, especially when combined
with other threats such as the observation network system and the Air Defense
Identification Zone, which should concern all responsible nations.”
“Moreover, the profile of these developments would appear to
establish full control of China
over the South China Sea ,” he stressed.
Del Rosario also reminded the ministers that the massive
reclamation is causing “widespread destruction of the region’s marine
biodiversity” and could “irreparably damage the entire ecological balance in
the South China Sea .”
The Philippines
filed a case against China
in 2013 before a Netherlands-based arbitral tribunal to try to declare Beijing ’s enormous claim
as illegal. Angered by Manila ’s move, China declared several times that it will not
join the proceedings as it does not recognize Manila ’s case.
Keeping its silence on China ’s
activities, which has alarmed many foreign governments, such as the United States and Japan , “presents a strategic policy
dilemma for ASEAN,” Del Rosario said.
“ASEAN should endeavor to speak with one voice in asking China to
explain why it is undertaking these massive reclamation projects,” he said.
“With both freedom of navigation, peace and stability at
risk, ASEAN as a regional force should consider reaching out to the community
of nations to help us say to China
that what it is doing is wrong, that it must immediately stop its reclamation
activities,” Del Rosario said.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=730578
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