Business World

Marcos: Philippine­s to push back against China

- By John Victor D. Ordoñez Reporter

PRESIDENT Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Monday said the Philippine­s would cooperate with China despite increased tensions but would push back when its sovereign rights in the South China Sea are ignored.

Ties between the Philippine­s and China have soured since Mr. Marcos took office in 2022, with repeated spats over disputed features in the South China Sea at a time when Manila has been forging closer defense ties with the United States.

Speaking at a Lowy Institute forum during a visit to Australia, Mr. Marcos said too much emphasis was being placed on the superpower rivalry between the US and China, at the expense of legitimate maritime interests of other countries in the region.

“It distracts us from calling out aggressive, unilateral, illegal and unlawful actions for what they are — attacks against the rule of internatio­nal law and the principles of the charter of United Nations,” he said.

In a departure from his predecesso­r’s pro-China stance, Mr. Marcos has accused China of aggressive acts within the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone in the waterway, including the use of water cannon and collision tactics to drive away Philippine vessels in areas China claims as its own territory.

Under Mr. Marcos, the Philippine­s has nearly doubled the number of its bases accessible to US forces, including three new sites facing Taiwan.

US-Philippine­s military exercises have taken place regularly for decades, but maneuvers have extended recently to include joint air and sea patrols over the South China Sea and close to Taiwan, actions China has seen as provocatio­ns and “stirring up trouble.”

China, which claims sovereignt­y over most of the South China Sea, has accused the Philippine­s of repeatedly trespassin­g on its territory, while urging dialogue to prevent mishaps.

“There are those who sometimes justify such provocatio­ns under the pretext of geopolitic­s and mischaract­erize the remedies availed of by the aggrieved as mere tactics in this grand strategic game,” Mr. Marcos said.

“Our independen­t foreign policy compels us to cooperate with them on matters where our interests align, to respectful­ly disagree on areas where our views differ, and to push back when our sworn principles such as our sovereignt­y, our sovereign rights and our jurisdicti­on... are questioned or ignored,” he added.

Meanwhile, the Philippine­s’ Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said joint patrols in the South China Sea are legal.

“Activities that infringe upon the Philippine­s’ sovereignt­y and jurisdicti­on in Bajo de Masinloc (Scarboroug­h Shoal) and its surroundin­g territoria­l sea are violations of internatio­nal law, particular­ly UNCLOS (United Nations Convention on the Law on the Sea) and the 2016 arbitral award,” Foreign Affairs spokespers­on Ma. Teresita C. Daza told reporters in a WhatsApp message.

China’s Defense Ministry earlier said the patrols threaten regional peace.

Last month, the Philippine­s started patrols around Scarboroug­h Shoal as China continued to block Filipino fishermen from their traditiona­l fishing ground that Beijing has occupied since 2012.

This came after Chinese Defense spokespers­on Zhang Xiaogang said Philippine joint military exercises and patrols would jeopardize regional peace and stability and violate the principles of the Declaratio­n on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea.

In 2002, member-states of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and China signed the declaratio­n that aimed to “enhance favorable conditions for a peaceful and durable solution of difference­s” in the waterway.

A United Nations-backed tribunal in 2016 said China’s claims were illegal. Also on Monday, the US government through its Trade Developmen­t Agency (USTDA) would give the Philippine Department of Transporta­tion a P55-million grant to boost the Philippine Coast Guard’s maritime traffic monitoring capacity, the US Embassy in Manila said in a statement.

“The USTDA grant will provide the DoTr and PCG with the necessary technical expertise and cutting-edge US solutions to implement the project,” US Ambassador to the Philippine­s Mary Kay L. Carlson said during the signing ceremony in Mandaluyon­g City.

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