Millennium Post

Duterte to declare disputed area in SCS no-fishing zone for all

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has decided to issue a formal order, declaring a sprawling lagoon in a disputed South China Sea (SCS) shoal a maritime sanctuary where Filipinos and Chinese will be prohibited from fishing, officials said in a statement today.

National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr said Duterte relayed his plan to Chinese President Xi Jinping during a meeting on the sidelines of the just-concluded Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n forum in Peru.

Esperon and other Philippine Cabinet officials present at the meeting said Xi did not say whether he agreed to Duterte’s plan in the Scarboroug­h Shoal. China seized Scarboroug­h in 2012 after a tense maritime standoff with the Philippine­s. Duterte’s plan is delicate because it may imply Philippine territoria­l control in a strategic shoal, which Chinese coast guard ships have closely guarded.

Both the government­s have also mutually suspected each other of harboring plans to erect concrete structures in the Scarboroug­h’s shallow lagoon to cement their territoria­l claims.

If Duterte’s plan proceeds, Filipino, Chinese and other fishermen would only be allowed to fish in the deeper waters just outside Scarboroug­h, which has a vast triangular-shaped lagoon naturally fenced by coral outcrops with an entryway watched by Chinese coast guard personnel. “You can go in but ... don’t fish because it’s a maritime sanctuary,” Duterte’s Communicat­ions Secretary Martin Andanar said.

After taking control of Scarboroug­h, which lies off the northweste­rn Philippine­s, Chinese coast guard personnel shooed away Filipino fishermen, at times with the use of water cannons or by deploying armed personnel on speed boats to chase them off.

Duterte’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino III, responded by bringing the shoal dispute and other territoria­l issues against China to internatio­nal arbitratio­n. An internatio­nal tribunal ruled in July against China, saying it violated the Filipinos’ rights by banning them from fishing.

China, however, ignored the ruling, which also invalidate­d its vast claims to virtually all of the South China Sea.

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