The documentary promoting awareness instilling patriotism among Filipinos worldwide in the country’s struggle to maintain its hold over some of the islands in the
Dubbed as
“Karapatan sa Karagatan” the maritime and sovereignty awareness video launched
by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) at the government-run television
station PTV-4 on Friday has been picked up by local and foreign media.
The maritime and
territorial awareness documentary also become an instant hit in various social
media platforms, including Facebook, and is expected to attract further
attention on the mounting maritime conflict in the region triggered China ’s aggressive claim over the whole South China Sea .
The launching of
documentary, the first of three parts, gained more meaning as it was aired on
national television as the country celebrated its 117th Independence Day.
Armed Forces of
the Philippines (AFP) spokesman Brig. Gen. Joselito Kakilala said that it is
about time the entire nation must realize the importance of the country’s
sovereignty issue in the West Philippine Sea (South China
Sea ).
“This is a good
initiative to raise awareness about our territorial claim. Our countrymen must
realize the importance of the WPS territories. We must be united in supporting
the government’s position in resolving the dispute peacefully,” Kakilala said.
On the security
side, the AFP is currently in the forefront of the maritime row as its troops
have been on forward deployment on one of the nine established positions in the
Kalayaan Island Group in the Spratlys archipelago.
AFP Public
Affairs Office chief Lt. Col. Harold Cabunoc said the sovereignty awareness
campaign will help instill patriotism in the hearts and minds of Filipinos,
especially among those who are not really aware of the country’s maritime
domain in the West Philippine Sea .
He said the
campaign, being spearheaded by the DFA, is aimed at rallying support of the
entire nation in resolving the maritime row in a diplomatic and peaceful
manner.
The Philippines , now on the receiving end of China ’s
bullying in the region, has opted to legally deal with the issue by bringing
the maritime conflict for international arbitration before the International
Tribunal on the Law of the Sea (ITLOS).
Peter Paul
Galvez, spokesman of the Department of National Defense (DND), said the defense
security sector viewed the documentary as an important thing for every Filipino
to know more about issues that the country is facing.
“We believe the
important thing for us today is for every Filipino to know more about our
beloved country and the issues that we face,” Galvez told GMA News.
Environmental
impact
On the other
hand, a national scientist said the Philippines
and Vietnam would be the
first to bear the environmental impact of China ’s
reclamation in South China Sea .
Former
environment secretary Angel Alcala said China ’s construction projects could
result in biodiversity loss and affect fish supply in the long term.
He noted that Philippines and Vietnam
– two of China ’s rival
claimants in the West Philippine Sea – are the countries nearest the China
construction projects.
“The impact will
be reduced biodiversity,” Alcala said during the US embassy seminar for regional
media here.
“I’m wondering
why Chinese scientists do not point this out,” he added
Alcala explained
the reclamation would disrupt the distribution of larvae or developed fish
eggs.
“The atolls are
very important in the West Philippine Sea
because they are actually concentrations and in the center of the atolls are
the lagoons and the lagoons have the fishes and the larvae of the fish,” Alcala
said.
He explained the
larvae are transported to different countries through currents.
“If you completely
enclose the lagoon with roads or airplanes, you reduce the probability of
larvae from escaping from inside the lagoons,” the former environment chief
said.
Alcala said the
disruption would put a dent on fish supply since the larvae cannot develop into
adult fish.
“The Philippines and Vietnam
(will first feel the impact) including Palawan and (other parts of) Luzon ,” Alcala said.
To assert its
expansive claim, China is
embarking on a massive reclamation program in disputed areas, including those
within the Philippines ’
exclusive economic zone.
Chinese
construction projects are rapidly progressing in Panganiban (Mischief), Zamora
(Subi), Kagitingan (Fiery Cross), Kennan (Chigua), Mabini (Johnson South),
Burgos (Gaven) and Calderon (Cuarteron) Reefs.
Alcala said China ’s
activities would eventually disrupt the livelihood of coastal communities. He
said the world should “force” China
to stop the construction efforts.
The Philippines , through the Department of Foreign
Affairs (DFA), has said China ’s
projects are causing “irreversible and widespread damage to the biodiversity
and ecological balance of the West Philippine Sea .”
The DFA said the
reclamation has destroyed 300 acres of coral reef systems and has led to annual
economic losses worth $100 million.
Members of the
international community, including the industrialized countries that constitute
the G7, have opposed the reclamation and have called for rules-based order in
the West Philippine Sea .
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