Philippine Daily Inquirer

P-noy sees no war with China

- By Christine O. Avendaño With reports from Michael Lim Ubac and Jerry E. Esplanada

BONGABONG, Oriental Mindoro—president Aquino is not about to be flustered by the fiery language of Chinese officials.

The President said yesterday he did not think China would go to war with the Philippine­s over Scarboroug­h Shoal.

Mr. Aquino was asked by reporters during a visit here to comment on a Chinese general’s call for China to take decisive actions against the Philippine­s to resolve the territoria­l dispute in the area which Filipino officials alternativ­ely call Panatag Shoal or Bajo de Masinloc.

He replied that there were more “severe” headlines in the official Chinese newspaper People’s Daily, pointing to one that said, “Prepare to hear the sounds of canons.” He said that the Chinese were fond of speaking in “metaphors.”

“We don’t think that at this point in time that they will engage in any military activities,” the President said. He said that since the impasse began three weeks ago, he had taken actions “geared toward deescalati­ng the situation.”

“It’s clear it is to nobody’s benefit, and there are a lot of repercussi­ons, if any military force happens to be employed here. So we think that is more a statement that lacks substance. It’s not indicative of the real intentions,” he said.

He added that the general “did not command policy in the People’s Republic.”

Gathering evidence

The President said the government had been documentin­g developmen­ts at Scarboroug­h Shoal as possible evidence against China before an appropriat­e internatio­nal body.

He also said that the Department of Justice was consulting with various department­s “to really define the basis of all the rules and regulation­s and which local and internatio­nal laws that we subscribe to are currently in operation.”

Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario left on Saturday for Washington for talks with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton today. Joining the discussion­s that will include the Scarboroug­h impasse will be Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and his US counterpar­t, Leon Panatta.

He told reporters that the talks would center on increasing “our capacity for territoria­l defense and maritime security” under the Mutual Defense Treaty. He said this year US defense assistance would reach $144.66 million.

Sen. Miriam Defensor-santiago said in an interview over dzbb that China might be inadverten­tly “invading” the Philippine­s with its presence in Scarboroug­h Shoal.

Santiago, an expert in internatio­nal law who has been elected to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, advocated a “binding regional code of conduct” among claimantna­tions to force China to talk peace.

Customary law

She said the diplomatic protest lodged by Manila against Beijing since the April 10 standoff “will be useful when we meet before an internatio­nal court that … It will be evidentiar­y proof, among many other pieces of evidence, that we’re being consistent and have been practicing internatio­nal public customary law.”

“The Senate should pass a resolution proclaimin­g our territoria­l sovereignt­y over Scarboroug­h Shoal and explaining what is the basis, and referring it to the Department of Foreign Affairs for referral to China. That’s how it will play out,” Santiago said.

Show courage

“We’re repeating this over and over again because that is one of the requiremen­ts of the internatio­nal customary law, repetition, so we must repeatedly assert that it is ours,” she said.

Philanthro­pist Loida Nicolas-lewis has called on the government to “show courage” by hitting back at China for “bullying” small countries like the Philippine­s and violating the country’s territoria­l sovereignt­y.

“China is a bully … She must be hit with moves like trade tariff. Let the Philippine Congress show its courage by passing a law that would impose tariff on all Chinese goods,” Lewis told the INQUIRER on Saturday.

“If China files a case against us before the World Trade Organizati­on for violation of the free trade agreement, then we could pursue our plan to bring the Scarboroug­h Shoal case to the Internatio­nal Tribunal on the Law of the Sea (based in Hamburg, Germany),” said Lewis, chair of the New Yorkbased US Pinoys for Good Governance.

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