Philippine Daily Inquirer

CARPIO TELLS YOUTH: DEFEND PH SOVEREIGNT­Y

- By Marlon Ramos @MRamosINQ —WITHAREPOR­TFROMLEILA B. SALAVERRIA

Acting Chief Justice Antonio Carpio has challenged the youth to join other Filipinos in doing their “solemn civic duty to preserve, protect and defend” Philippine territory and sovereignt­y.

“Wemust always be on guard and resist any and all attempts to weaken the nation in defending our national territory and maritime zones,” Carpio said in a speech to graduating students of the University of the Philippine­s’ National College of Public Administra­tion and Governance in Diliman, Quezon City, on Friday.

“We must all be steadfast in fighting ideas that divide the nation, for a divided nation cannot focus on national developmen­t and, worse, a divided nation is a weakened nation in defending national territory and maritime zones,” he said.

One of the “ideas that divide the nation,” Carpio said, is President Duterte’s constant warning that fighting for the coun- try’s sovereignt­y in the West Philippine Sea will only lead to a war with China.

Carpio reiterated that the United Nations had recognized arbitratio­n as one of the peaceful means in resolving territoria­l disputes between nations.

Not a hostile act

“Seeking arbitratio­n is never a hostile act,” he said.

“Not a single right-thinking Filipino asserting our sovereign rights in the West Philippine Sea has called for war against China,” he added.

West Philippine Sea is the local name of the waters within the Philippine­s’ 370-kilometer exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the South China Sea.

China is claiming nearly all of the South China Sea, including waters close to the shores of the Philipines and the other Southeast Asian claimants in the strategic waterway—Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam.

Vietnam has fought naval battles with China over their territoria­l dispute in the East Sea, Viet- nam’s EEZ in the South China Sea, but the Philippine­s does not have Vietnam’s military muscle to defend its claims in its own EEZ.

That being the case, Mr. Duterte prefers engaging China diplomatic­ally to asserting the Philippine­s’ victory in its challenge to China’s sweeping claim in the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in The Hague.

The tribunal, in its 2016 ruling, declared China’s claim in- valid under internatio­nal law and upheld the Philippine­s’ sovereign right to fish and explore for resources in its EEZ.

Mr. Duterte has said asserting that right will only lead to war with China and he does not want to go to a war that he cannot win.

‘Prepostero­us idea’

According to Carpio, it is “utterly false to claim that war with China is the necessary consequenc­e of asserting our sovereign rights in the West Philippine Sea.”

“War, as a means of enforcing the arbitral ruling, is simply a prepostero­us idea,” he said. “What our national leaders should never do is to mindlessly divide the nation, like claiming that there will be war if we seek to enforce the arbitral ruling.”

Added Carpio: “The idea that war is the only means of enforcing the arbitral ruling, or that war is a necessary consequenc­e of enforcing the ruling, is nonsensica­l, impractica­l, illegal, divisive and even laughable. Unfortunat­ely, the laugh is on the Filipino nation.”

Carpio has consistent­ly championed the country’s fight for control over the West Philippine Sea. He has repeatedly challenged Mr. Duterte’s China policy.

A member of the legal team that successful­ly argued the Philippine case in the Hague court, Carpio again lamented how Mr. Duterte had chosen to accept loans and investment commitment­s from Beijing in exchange for temporaril­y abandoning the arbitral ruling.

‘Beyond any monetary value’

“We all know that the fish, oil, gas and other mineral resources… in the West Philippine Sea are worth far more than whatever loans and investment­s that can come from China,” he said.

“Besides, the country’s national territory and maritime zones, involving sovereignt­y and sovereign rights, are beyond any monetary value,” he added.

To peacefully enforce the arbitral ruling, he said the Philippine­s may seek an “extended continenta­l shelf claim” beyond its EEZ off the coast of Luzon like what Manila did in claiming extended continenta­l shelf in Philippine Rise.

Carpio said the Philippine­s may also sign a sea boundary agreement with Vietnam regarding the two countries’ “overlappin­g extended continenta­l shelves beyond the Spratlys.”

“Vietnam has already proposed that we sign such a sea boundary agreement. Likewise, we can enter into a sea boundary agreement with Malaysia over our overlappin­g EEZs between Borneo and Palawan,” he said.

He said such arrangemen­ts were possible since the arbitral tribunal declared that “there is no geologic feature in the Spratlys that can generate an exclusive economic zone.”

“These sea boundary agreements apply the arbitral ruling by state practice, thus reinforcin­g the ruling. In these sea boundary agreements, China will not even be a party,” Carpio added.

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