Malacanang on Thursday said the Philippines
will continue to use the diplomatic mode on its fight to prove ownership over
some islands in the West Philippine Sea and advised China to do the same.
Presidential Spokesperson Edwin Lacierda, in a briefing Thursday,
said "the situation clearly calls for arbitration."
"China
has been claiming sovereignty over areas, which they do not certainly have any
legal title to. So we will continue to insist on our position, and the way to
go about it is to do it through arbitration," he said.
And since China
has been stressing its rights using historical basis, Lacierda said China "can
very well submit themselves to arbitration where it is going to be decided by a
panel of objective jurors."
"For one reason or another, China refuses to participate in
arbitration. If they feel that they have a very strong case and they could have
jumped in immediately and argue their case before the ITLOS (International
Tribunal for the Law of the Sea) (they should have done so) but they have
not," he said.
This refusal to bring their case before an international
tribunal "shows you the status of their position insofar as their claim on
the South China Sea ," he pointed out.
Lacierda said the Philippines
" will not indulge them (China )
with returning juvenile rhetoric."
"We’d rather insist that we discuss this on a high
level by resorting—and discussing it in the international forum—the
international arbitration arena," he said.
The Philippines
have submitted an arbitration case before a UN Tribunal as China continues its reclamation activities at
the West Philippine Sea .
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=769063
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