From Rappler (Mar 14):
China on Ayungin: PH broke its promise
Slamming Manila
for “out-and-out provocation,” China
accused the Philippines
of breaking its promise to remove a stranded ship from the disputed Ayungin
Shoal.
In a statement on Thursday, March
13, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said the Philippines had
made an “unequivocal commitment” to tow the ship away from Ayungin, which the
Chinese government calls the Ren'ai Reef.
“However, the Philippines is yet
to live up to its promise and haul away the rusty ship. To make matters worse,
it sent two ships to transport construction materials to the Ren'ai Reef, with
the aim of building facilities and 'maintaining a presence' at China's
island,” Qin said.
He also belied a claim by the
Philippine government that the ships “were only conducting rotation of
personnel and resupply operations.” (READ: PH protests China's moves in Ayungin Shoal)
He said, “The two Philippine
ships were loaded with concrete and rebar rather than food. Is concrete and
rebar edible?”
The spokesman said the ship has
been “illegally grounded" in the shoal since 1999. The vessel got stranded
“with the excuse of 'malfunction.'”
“The behavior of the Philippine
side has infringed upon China's
rights and interests, and violated the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in
the South China Sea. It is an out-and-out
provocation. China
has every reason to send away the two Philippine ships,” he added.
Rappler is still trying to reach
the Philippines'
Department of Foreign Affairs for comment as of posting time.
The shoal is located in the West
Philippine Sea (South China Sea), the subject of a historic case that Manila filed against Beijing.
(READ: What's at
stake in our case vs China)
[Video: China to PH Remove ship from Ayungin
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o7oZ2_yraSo]
US slammed, too
Qin made these statements after
the United States
on Wednesday, March 12, said it is “troubled” by the Ayungin incident.
He said: “Comments made by the US in disregard
of facts are inconsistent with its non-party capacity. It goes against US
commitment of not taking sides on issues of dispute, has a negative effect on
the maintenance of peace and stability of Southeast Asia, and in the final
analysis, does no good to the US
itself.”
Earlier, Qin urged the Philippines to remove the stranded ship from
Ayungin.
Instead of heeding China's request, however, the Philippines is
even preparing to send more civilian ships to Ayungin.
"I cannot tell you about the
specific date, but what I can tell you is that's definite. It is not that we
are trying to court China's
ire. We do not want to starve our people to death or to thirst them," said an official who asked not to be identified because he
is not authorized to speak on the matter.
The official also denied that the
two Philippine ships carried construction materials. “Those are items for the
improvement of the living condition of our troops there, the habitability of
the place," he explained.
He added, "We know who is
continuously building structures there.”
China's show of force comes after the so-called
“water cannon incident,” and before the deadline of the Manila's written pleading in its case against
the rising superpower. (READ: PH faces major hurdle in China case)
http://www.rappler.com/nation/52965-china-ship-ayungin-shoal-philippines-promise
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