China's deputy ambassador to the UN says, '[The Philippines'] calculations are totally wrong. No matter what they say, they will never get their way'
'ROCK FIRM.' Wang Min, Deputy Permanent Representative of China to the UN, defends China's reclamation work in the South China Sea. File UN Photo/Amanda Voisard
A Chinese diplomat at the United Nations (UN) lashed back at the
At a meeting at
the UN Headquarters in New York on Friday,
June 12, Philippine Permanent Representative to the UN Lourdes Yparraguirre
said that China 's
artificial island-building is a form of “intimidation, coercion or force.”
Wang responded by
calling the Philippine statements “unwarranted accusations.” He insisted that China will
continue with its reclamation work despite protests from “that country.”
“Let me make this
very clear to that country here: its calculations are totally wrong. China 's will to
safeguard her sovereignty and territorial integrity is rock firm. No matter
what and how much they say at this meeting or any UN venues, they will never
get their way,” Chinese state media Xinhua quoted Wang as saying.
The Philippine
Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said on Sunday, June 14, that Yparraguirre
took the annual meeting of State Parties to the UN Convention on the Law of the
Sea (UNCLOS) as an opportunity to express Manila 's
concern about China 's
“increasingly aggressive rhetoric and action in the South
China Sea .”
The Philippine
envoy said that China 's
“massive, large-scale land reclamation” was a unilateral and aggressive action
that threatens UNCLOS, known as the constitution for the oceans. The Philippines and China are both state parties to
UNCLOS.
In the past 18
months, China has been building artificial islands in maritime features that
the Philippines is contesting under a historic arbitration case Manila filed
under UNCLOS before the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague. A hearing
is set in July. (READ: What's at stake in our case vs China)
Wang reiterated China 's stance
that its construction work is legitimate.
"China 's construction activities on her islands
and reefs are conducted in the Chinese territory, falling entirely within the
scope of China 's
sovereignty. It is legal, justified and reasonable," he said.
Wang
sought to address the concern of claimant countries and the United States about reclamation by saying that
it will “not undermine other countries' lawful right to the freedom of
navigation in the South China Sea but will
facilitate their joint response to challenges on the sea and provide more
guarantee for navigation safety.”
Satellite
images showed that China
is constructing an airstrip, port facilities, cement factories, barracks, and
other installations that will allow it to maintain de facto control of the
disputed sea. (WATCH: Rappler Talk: The Philippines and China's 'Great Wall
of Sand')
'FORCING CHANGE.' Philippine Ambassador to the UN Lourdes Yparraguirre criticizes China's reclamation work in the South China Sea at an UNCLOS meeting in the UN Headquarters in New York. Photo courtesy: DFA
Arbitration 'erroneous'
The
Philippine ambassador pointed out that China 's reclamation work is meant
to change the status of the maritime features ahead of the ruling of the
tribunal expected in early 2016.
“There
should be no pattern of forcing a change in the status quo in order to advance
a so-called nine-dash line claim of undisputed sovereignty over nearly the
entire South China Sea ,” Yparraguirre said.
The
Filipino envoy said that China
accelerated large-scale ocean filling in disputed features in the Spratly Islands including Johnson Reef, McKennan
Reef, Mischief Reef, Cuarteron Reef, Gaven Reef, and Fiery Cross Reef. Fiery
Cross Reef alone expanded to 11 times its original area.
Yparraguirre
defended the Philippines '
decision to go to arbitration, calling it “a pacific and rules-based mode of
settling disputes.” She said that bilateral negotiations with China proved
“futile and one-sided” because of “lack of good faith.”
Yet
Wang slammed her argument, insisting on China 's preference for
country-to-country talks where the rising Asian superpower can assert its
economic and political influence.
"China urges
that country to correct its erroneous actions and return to the right track of
resolving the disputes through bilateral negotiations as soon as possible,”
Wang said.
The Philippines ' maritime dispute with China escalated in recent months after satellite
images exposed the scale of Beijing 's
construction work in the strategic sea. The Philippines '
treaty ally, the United
States also stepped in, condemning
reclamation and promising to continue naval and air patrols near the artificial
islands. (READ: 'China miscalculated US response to reclamation')
$280
million lost annually
Besides
raising legal and geopolitical concerns, the Philippines
stressed that China 's
reclamation work is "an environmental crisis."
“[China]
has had to dredge out and pulverize entire systems of coral reefs that took
many centuries to grow, reducing them into landfill, and thus devastating the
already fragile marine ecosystem and biodiversity of the region by irreparably
destroying the habitat of depleted, threatened or endangered species and other
forms of marine life,” said Yparraguirre.
In
another Philippine-organized forum at the UN on Wednesday, June 10, marine
science expert Dr. Edgardo Gomez estimated that the 800 hectares of reclamation
China
did amounted to an annual loss worth US $280 million in ecosystem products and
services.
“These
are losses to the Vietnamese, the Filipinos, the Malaysians, the Indonesians,
and to the Chinese themselves,” said Gomez, professor emeritus of the
University of the Philippines Marine Science Institute.
“All
countries that are contributing to the degradation and destruction of the
shallow water ecosystems must stop their activities that are known to be
detrimental to the productivity and biodiversity of the waters of Southeast Asia ,” Gomez added.
Gomez
said that exploiting endangered species, overfishing and destructive fishing in
the South China Sea must stop.
The
Philippines , Vietnam and Taiwan
have also done construction work in the features they control but not to the
extent that China
has.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/96361-china-un-philippines-reclamation
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