Senior Associate Justice Antonio Carpio on Thursday called
on rival South China Sea claimants to declare the Spratlys a marine protected
park to shield it from further destruction following China ’s massive island construction
binge in the contested waters.
Carpio sees the move as a “way forward” and a “win-win”
solution to the territorial disputes that involves the Philippines , China ,
Vietnam , Malaysia , Brunei
and Taiwan .
An international tribunal on July 12 had invalidated China ’s massive claim over the resource-rich
South China Sea and declared its reclamation activities as illegal in response
to a complaint filed by the Philippines
in January 2013.
“We are not moving at all so the Philippines
should talk to Malaysia , Vietnam , Indonesia to declare Spratlys as a
protected area on our own. We can do that,” Carpio said at a forum organized by
think-tank ADR Institute for Strategic and International Studies at De La Salle
University in Manila .
Carpio said the initiative could be done collectively
through a convention or a treaty or even individually if it failed to get the
cooperation of all other claimants.
“We have to move, otherwise, we are stuck here,” he said,
noting that a collective declaration will “isolate” China if it will continue to defy
the tribunal’s ruling and resume the reclamation of features.
Backing a proposal by renowned marine biologist Dr. John
McManus for the creation of a Spratlys
International Marine
Peace Park ,
Carpio said the move would enable all claimants to suspend for 100 years their
territorial claims.
They should also declare all the low-tide and high-tide
features in the Spratlys, and an area of 3-nautical miles around each feature,
a preserved marine area, for the benefit of all coastal states in the South China Sea .
Carpio said this ensured that the Spratlys will remain the South China Sea ’s nursery where fish spawn.
“The eggs and larvae of fish that spawn in the Spratlys are
carried by the currents to the coasts of China ,
Vietnam , Luzon, Palawan , Malaysia ,
Brunei , Natuna Islands ,
as well as the Sulu seas,” he said.
Prof. Carmen Lagman of the De La Salle University’s College of Science claimants may also opt for
joint, bilateral, or trilateral agreement for reefs that have been identified
by scientists in four areas in the Spratlys as very important.
“What it does is that its resources will be put in the area
for policing and the area will be monitored,” Lagman said.
Meanwhile, claimant states, under the peace park proposal,
will hold on to whatever islands or structures they now possess, but only coast
guard personnel and vessels can be stationed in the Spratlys, said Carpio.
Existing structures can only be used for marine scientific
research and eco-tourism, he said, citing a similar model such as the 1994
peace agreement between Israel
and Jordan that created the Red Sea Marine
Peace Park
in the Gulf of Aqaba in the Red Sea .
Former Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said Manila
should act now to save South China Sea’s ecosystem, lamenting that the highly
destructive practice by China is now “very widespread” across the Spratly area.
“These realities are not just unsustainable, but
unacceptable,” he said at the same forum. “If you can see the gravities of
these activities, the incidents they sparked showed us that marine destruction
is not simply collateral damage but it is at the heart of the problem to be
resolved.”
Del Rosario urged the Philippine government to look for ways
to cooperate with its neighbors to preserve marine ecosystems in the South China Sea and to ensure the sustainability of
fishing resources for everyone.
“Some things we can not reverse, but at least we should not
aggravate the destruction,” Del Rosario said.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=912915
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