With the
"I hope China will abide (with the ruling) because it
will be good for the whole region if everybody will follow the rule of law,
nobody can just cherry pick the laws that we are going to abide by it. We
believe in a community of nations (that) exist side-by-side harmoniously,"
he added.
However, Lorenzana declined to comment on the ruling's
effect on security of the disputed areas and whether the Philippines
will now lift its construction moratorium at Ayungin Shoal, now that the United
Nations Permanent Court of Arbitration has ruled that the feature belongs to
the country.
"I can't answer that now because the government is
still processing the decision of the tribunal which is more than 500 pages, the
Solicitor General just went through it," the DND chief stressed.
"Many things need to be studied first, the President said
there is no rush in deciding what to do, study this and wait for other
developments and consult with (our) allies first on what do," he further
revealed.
At 5:00 p.m. Tuesday (Manila time), the United Nations
Permanent Court of Arbitration handed down its decision on the case which
invalidated China's claim over its "historic rights" to the disputed
waters, stressing that its 'Nine-Dash-Line' claim has no legal basis.
The ruling also added that China
violated the Philippines '
sovereign rights in its exclusive economic zone through meddling with
Philippine fishing and oil exploration in the region, allowing the illegal
entry of Chinese fishermen into the disputed waters and causing harm to marine
environment in the region through its massive reclamation activities.
Such actions, according to the tribunal, has also caused the
escalation of tension between the two parties.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=903629
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