This time it’s over Ayungin Reef (Ren’ai Reef to the Chinese.)
The Philippine Navy reported sightings of Chinese ships in the
vicinity of Ayungin shoal as early as first week of May, the last
stretch of the May 13 elections, and before the May 9 incident in
Balintang Channel where the Philippine Coast Guard fired upon a
Taiwanese fishing vessel and killed one of the fishermen.
The Department of Foreign Affairs filed a diplomatic protest on Chinese presence near Ayungin shoal May 10.
DFA Spokesman Raul Hernandez said in their protest, they cited “the
provocative and illegal presence of the Chinese government ships around
Ayungin Shoal.”
He said that “Ayungin Shoal is an integral part of our national
territory” stressing that shoal is located 105.77 nautical miles from
Palawan and constitutes part of the country’s 200-nautical mile
continental shelf as provided under the United Nations Convention on the
Law of the Sea.
China, of course, insisted that Ayungin Reef, which they call Ren ‘ai
Reef, is theirs being a part of Sansha City, established last June in
the southernmost province of Hainan. The Philippines had also protested
the inclusion of Macclesfield Field, one of the largest underwater
atolls in the world, covering an area of 6,500 square kilometers which
is in Philippine territory, under Sansha city.
An article in a Chinese online publication, Global Times, under the
headline, “Ren’ai Reef under actual control of China” said, “ Wang
Xiaopeng, a scholar studying issues pertinent to territorial seas at
China’s Academy of Social Sciences, commented that the Chinese Foreign
Ministry never made mention of the Ren’ai Reef when, back in April, it
released eight Chinese islets and reefs currently seized by the
Philippines, which means the Ren’ai Reef is already under China’s actual
control.”
The eight islets that the Chinese acknowledged being occupied by the
Philippines are Lawak, Patag, Parola,Pag-asa,Kota, Panata,Rizal, Likas.
The article further said:“Ren’ai Reef… is part of the Chinese
territory and, an area over which China proclaims sovereignty and vows
never to yield an inch to others. “
Obviously, China ignores the fact that in Ayungin shoal, there’s BRP
Sierra Madre, a Philippine Navy ship that was purposely beached in the
islets following the occupation by China of the Mischief or Panganiban
Reef in 1995. Ayungin Reef is 25 miles away from Mischief Reef.
What does the Philippine government do in the face of what many fear
is another expansionist act by China in the disputed waters of Spratlys.
Not much really. The Philippines has filed a petition with the United
Nations’ Artbitral Court to look, among other issues, into the legality
of China’s nine-dash line map,which is the basis for its claim of the
whole South China Sea including islands in the territorial waters and
exclusive economic zones of the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei
and Vietnam.
But the petition has not deterred China from going into disputed areas they consider part of their territory.
Supreme Court Justice Antonio Carpio, in his speech before the
graduating class Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila College of Law last
week, warned of the dangers of China’s 9-dashed line.
“In the case of the Philippines, China’s 9-dashed line claim takes
away our exclusive economic zone and extended continental shelf in the
West Philippine Sea beyond 30 to 50 NM from the baselines of the
Philippines. That deprives the Philippines of 80% of its exclusive
economic zone, and 100% of its extended continental shelf, in the West
Philippine Sea.”
But even Carpio acknowledges the difficulty of enforcing the decision
of the U.N Arbitral Court if it’s adverse to China, which has refused
to participate in the case.
“So what can the Philippines do?,” Justice Carpio asked.
Carpio said “The only remaining recourse for the Philippines is to appeal to world opinion.”
He told the graduates: “As life-long students of the law with an
abiding faith in the Rule of Law, it is your mission from now on to help
shape world opinion that a nation should follow the Rule of Law if it
wants to be accepted as a member and leader of the community of
civilized nations. If a nation refuses to comply with the Rule of Law,
then it becomes a rogue nation, an outcast in the community of civilized
nations where adherence to the Rule of Law is the norm. A nation that
aspires to be a world power but refuses to follow the Rule of Law is a
danger to peace and stability in our world.”
Carpio said a favorable decision from the arbitral tribunal, and
world opinion also in our favor, time will be on the side of the
Philippines.
“In matters of sovereign rights among nations, our time horizon
should span several decades or even longer. In the battle to defend a
nation’s sovereign rights from encroachment by other states, there is no
such thing as instant success. Even nations with the Rule of Law and
world opinion on their side must persevere for a very long time to
succeed,” he said.
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