From InterAksyon (Jan 12): Avoiding China's wrath, Philippines puts off upgrades to South China Sea isles
The rusting BRP Sierra Madre has been stranded since the 1990s near the Ayungin (Second Thomas) Shoal in the Spratlys, some 194 km west of Palawan, Philippines. REUTERS/File
The Philippines is deferring plans to repair and upgrade features it occupies in the disputed South China Sea, the country's military chiefs said on Thursday, to avoid provoking China while the two traditional foes seek to bury the hatchet.
The Philippines would continue to observe a moratorium on construction in the Spratly islands that it adopted while an international tribunal handled an arbitration case it lodged against Beijing in 2013.
Even though a ruling handed down in July last year went in favor of the Philippines, its military top brass felt the timing was not right to start upgrades.
The decision to defer upgrades was to avoid "any aggressive action in the West Philippine Sea," Military chief General Eduardo Ano told a news conference at an army base, using the name by which the Philippines refers to the South China Sea.
He said the move aimed to preserve a new era of friendlier relations with China under President Rodrigo Duterte, who decided to engage Beijing, rather than confront it in the wake of an arbitral award it bitterly opposed.
Duterte says he is in no hurry to discuss that ruling and will do so only when China is ready.
The Philippines has been occupying nine features in the Spratlys, including a submerged reef on which a rusting transport ship ran aground in the late 1990s.
The Philippines has by far the weakest defense structures in the disputed area and most facilities are dilapidated. Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam and China also occupy areas of the contested archipelago.
China has reclaimed seven reefs, building man-made islands with anti-aircraft and anti-missile batteries. Satellite imagery shows development has continued lately, despite the arbitral ruling declaring that illegal.
Vietnam, which occupies the largest number of features in the South China Sea, has also enhanced its facilities.
"I don't know if we can now lift the moratorium," Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana told reporters. "We're on status quo for now."
Lorenzana said the government had allocated 800 million pesos ($16.15 million) to upgrade an eroded runway on an airfield on Thitu Island, but that work would not happen soon.
Rex Tillerson, US President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for secretary of state, told US legislators he wanted to send China a clear signal to stop building islands and leave those it has already made.
http://interaksyon.com/article/136123/avoiding-chinas-wrath-philippines-puts-off-upgrades-to-south-china-sea-isles
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