Sun.Star Cebu

Google scraps China name on map after Philippine furor

-

GOOGLE has quietly removed the Chinese name for a South China Sea shoal bitterly disputed by Beijing and Manila from its maps service, following an outcry from Filipinos.

The Google Maps website yesterday referred to the rich fishing ground — a subject of a case lodged by the Philippine­s at an internatio­nal arbitratio­n tribunal — by its internatio­nal name, Scarboroug­h Shoal.

The service had earlier labelled the shoal as part of China’s Zhongsha island chain, prompting an online campaign demanding that the Internet giant stop identifyin­g the outcrop as part of Chinese territory.

“We’ve updated Google Maps to fix the issue. We understand that geographic names can raise deep emotions which is why we worked quickly once this was brought to our attention,” Google’s office in Manila said.

Scarboroug­h Shoal lies 220 kilometers off the main Philippine island of Luzon and 650 kilometres from Hainan island, the nearest major Chinese land mass.

China has controlled the shoal since 2012, following a brief standoff with the Philippine­s.

Since then, the Philippine­s has accused the Chinese Coast Guard of harassing Filipino fishermen at the shoal, including robbing them of their catch at gunpoint earlier this year.

Campaigns website Change. org began a petition last week to get Google Maps to drop the Chinese name of the shoal on its site. The petition drew close to 2,000 supporters.

“China’s sweeping claim of (the) South China Sea under their nine-dash line purportedl­y historical boundary is illegal and is creating tension among nations,” the petition read.

“Google maps showing this is part of Zhongsha island chain gives credence to what is plainly a territory grab that peace loving nations should stand against.”

Last week, a United Nationsbac­ked tribunal at The Hague started hearing a Philippine petition to declare illegal China’s maritime claims in the South China Sea that overlap those of the Philippine­s.

On Monday, Filipino officials wrapped up arguments to convince the panel it had jurisdicti­on over the case, presidenti­al spokeswoma­n Abigail Valte said.

Justice Secretary Leila de Lima said the Philippine­s was “confident” the tribunal would assume jurisdicti­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines