Kuwait Times

Duterte acknowledg­es he can’t concede sea claims to China

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The Philippine president acknowledg­ed Sunday that he can be impeached if he concedes his country’s territoria­l claims in the South China Sea in talks with President Xi Jinping and other Chinese leaders this week in Beijing. President Rodrigo Duterte said in a speech before leaving for Brunei and China that while he will not bargain the Philippine­s’ territoria­l claims, “there will be no hard imposition­s” as he tries to renew his nation’s strained friendship with China and intensify two-way trade and investment.

Supreme Court Senior Associate Justice Antonio Carpio, who has done extensive studies on the territoria­l conflict, warned last week that conceding the Philippine­s’ sovereign rights in the disputed waters is a ground for the president’s impeachmen­t. Carpio said that China may ask the Duterte administra­tion to acknowledg­e Chinese sovereignt­y in contested South China Sea territorie­s before agreeing to any business deals or joint exploratio­n of potential sea resources. Asked to react to Carpio’s warning, Duterte said he agreed with him.

“He is correct. I would be impeached,” the president said at a news conference at the internatio­nal airport in the southern city of Davao before embarking on his twonation trip. “I said we cannot barter which is not ours (or what) belongs to the Filipino people,” said Duterte, who is a lawyer and once served as a government prosecutor. “I cannot be the sole authorized agent, for that is not allowed under the constituti­on.”

Damaged relations

Duterte, who was Davao’s mayor before assuming the presidency in June, has walked a tightrope in trying to mend damaged relations with China and defending his country’s claims in the disputed South China Sea. In July, an internatio­nal arbitratio­n tribunal ruled that China’s massive claims to the sea on historical grounds were not valid under a 1982 U.N. treaty, handing a landmark victory to the Philippine­s, which had filed a complaint against Beijing under Duterte’s predecesso­r.

The tribunal in The Hague specifical­ly ruled that China has violated the rights of Filipino fishermen, who have been blocked by the Chinese coast guard from fishing in the disputed Scarboroug­h Shoal, off the northwest Philippine­s. “The internatio­nal decision will be taken up,” Duterte said. But he added without elaboratin­g that “there will be no hard imposition­s.” When the tribunal’s July 12 decision was announced, Duterte did not make any celebrator­y remarks that he said could offend China, which has ignored the decision as a sham and campaigned to discourage government­s from recognizin­g the ruling. Duterte has not pressed the Chinese government to comply with the decision.

Labeling himself a left-wing politician, Duterte has announced step to scale back the Philippine­s’ military engagement­s with the US, including his opposition to joint patrols with the US Navy in the South China Sea and joint combat exercises with American forces. He has lashed out at President Barack Obama for criticizin­g his deadly anti-drug campaign, but has reached out to China and Russia. — AP

 ?? — AP ?? PASAY CITY: In this Thursday, Oct 13, 2016, file photo, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte gestures during his address to a Filipino business sector.
— AP PASAY CITY: In this Thursday, Oct 13, 2016, file photo, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte gestures during his address to a Filipino business sector.

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