The Philippines
stand to lose 80 percent of its territory facing the South China Sea if China
will continue to expand its sprawling claim in the contested waters, Senior
Associate Justice Antonio Carpio warned.
Carpio, in his lecture at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) last October 5 in Washington ,
said China ’s national
boundaries under its so-called nine-dash line impacts not only on the Philippines but
also other countries in the region and the world.
“The Philippines
loses about 80 percent of its Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ) facing the West Philippine Sea , including the entire Reed Bank and
part of the Malampaya gas field,” Carpio said.
Defying protests from other countries like the United States and Japan ,
China
has taken a more aggressive stance in the tense waters, beefing up its
reclamation activities over the last several months in disputed areas and
transformed previously submerged features into artificial islands with
buildings several stories high with at least one runway.
In a bid to reinforce its territorial claims amid Manila ’s legal challenge and confrontations in the
resource-rich waters, China ,
in January 2013, published a new 10-dash line map that placed nearly the entire
South China Sea within its “national
boundaries.” It was protested by Manila .
The map features 10-dash lines instead of the popularly
known "nine" dashes to mark a huge area of the waters in a
tongue-shaped encirclement as Chinese territory. Brunei ,
Malaysia , the Philippines , Taiwan
and Vietnam have been
contesting China 's
massive claim.
Nine dashes in the new Chinese map published by Sinomap
Press, are in the South China Sea, while a tenth dash has been placed near Taiwan
apparently to signify that territory's status as a Chinese province.
“Will the world community allow a single state to rewrite
the Law of the Sea, so this single state can exercise indisputable sovereignty
to almost an entire sea, subject the high seas to its sovereign jurisdiction,
and seize large areas of other coastal states’ EEZs, which are their legal
maritime entitlements under both customary international law?” asked Carpio.
Carpio noted that activities by China
to enforce its claim violate the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of
the Sea (UNCLOS) and the 2002 ASEAN-China Declaration on the Conduct of Parties
in the South China Sea . Such activities
threaten peace, security, and stability in the region. China is a
signatory to both agreements.
Carpio ended his lecture by reiterating that the Philippines
will stand by UNCLOS and the ruling of the Arbitral Tribunal with regard to the
maritime dispute.
“If UNCLOS does not apply to the South China Sea dispute, as
when China’s nine-dashed lines are allowed to gobble up the EEZs of coastal
states as well as the high seas, then UNCLOS, the constitution for the oceans
and seas, cannot also apply to any maritime dispute in the rest of the oceans
and seas of our planet,” he said.
“It will be the beginning of the end for UNCLOS. The rule of
the naval cannon will prevail in the oceans and seas of our planet, no longer
the rule of law. There will be a naval arms race among coastal countries,” said
Carpio.
After Washington , D.C. , Carpio will conduct also conduct lectures in New York City and San
Francisco in the next few days.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=0&sid=&nid=0&rid=812947
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