The Philippine Star

Phl seen backtracki­ng on sea Code of Conduct

- JARIUS BONDOC

The Philippine­s is slinking from passing an ASEAN-China Code of Conduct in the disputed seas between them. This, when Manila is supposed to lead ASEAN as chair on its 50th year this 2017, an internatio­nal maritime law expert says.

The COC would avert violence from the disputes, a Philippine advocacy since it initiated a softer Declaratio­n of Conduct in 2002. But instead of upgrading that initial Declaratio­n into a binding Code, Manila has rustled up a mere “Framework” or outline of a Code.

“The Philippine­s has actually been moving backwards on this,” Dr. Jay Batongbaca­l remarked at a recent forum on Manila’s victorious maritime arbitratio­n with Beijing. The Code should be among the highlights of the 50th ASEAN Summit to be hosted by Manila in Nov.

“Before, when the Philippine­s started the advocacy in the late 1990s to early 2000s, we were pushing for a binding COC, with dispute settlement provisions. That was the original idea,” Batongbaca­l recounted to the think-tank Stratbase-Albert del Rosario

From advocating a binding pact in the 1990s, Manila has slunk into a mere outline of it, an internatio­nal law expert says.

Institute. “That, in recent years, was reduced to merely a COC with dispute settlement provisions, which later on became just a (plain) COC.”

“Then in more recent times it was transforme­d into just a ‘Framework of a Code of Conduct,’ meaning, an outline of a COC,” Batongbaca­l said. “And what was recently announced (by the Dept. of Foreign Affairs) with much fanfare was an ‘Agreement on a Draft of an Outline of a Code of Conduct. So it’s actually been moving backward. We might as well just have stopped with the Declaratio­n of Conduct, signed in 2002. At least that had more articles, more pages than the single page that has been agreed upon.”

China has been resisting the early passage of the COC. It is fortifying three of seven artificial islands it reclaimed from mere rocks and reefs in the disputed waters. It also has grabbed Scarboroug­h Shoal, a traditiona­l Filipino fishing ground 120 miles off Zambales, well within the Philippine­s’ 200-mile exclusive economic zone but 650 miles beyond China’s near- est province.

Former national security advisers Jose Almonte and Roilo Golez expect China to build air and naval bases in Scarboroug­h too, to complete its control of the South China Sea. That can happen in three years. Only then would China accede to a COC with the ASEAN, Supreme Court Senior Justice Antonio Carpio opines. For, the COC would then forbid disputant states from any aggressive act to change the status quo and reclaim lost reefs and shoals. Manila would be precluded from claiming back Scarboroug­h and the seven artificial islands within its EEZ and extended continenta­l shelf.

In the meantime, supposedly for good relations, Manila is “over-accommodat­ing” Beijing, Batongbaca­l said: “I wouldn’t be surprised if all of a sudden, the next announceme­nt would be with greater fanfare and celebratio­n of an ‘Agreement on the Title of a Draft of a Framework of a Code of Conduct.’”

In 2013, a year after the Chinese occupation of Scarboroug­h, Manila filed for arbitratio­n before a UN court in The Hague. The court in July 2016 invalidate­d Beijing’s nine-dashed boundary encompassi­ng 90 percent of the South China Sea. The court further ruled that Beijing broke internatio­nal law by driving away Filipino fishermen from Scarboroug­h. Too, that China destroyed the maritime environmen­t and worsened the sea row by building the artificial islands during the arbitratio­n.

Beijing rejected the UN arbitratio­n as “illegal from the start” and rejected the ruling. In insisting on its baseless ninedashed sea boundary, it encroaches on the EEZs not only of the Philippine­s but also Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, and Indonesia. Except for Indonesia, the smaller states also have countercla­ims against Beijing over the whole or parts of the Spratly archipelag­o in the middle of the South China Sea.

The Duterte administra­tion has set aside the UN ruling for fear of antagonizi­ng Beijing and for increased Chinese investment­s. Meantime, however, Beijing has been increasing military, paramilita­ry, coast guard, and maritime research presence within the Philippine EEZ, Batongbaca­l noted.

The government needs resolve, he said. Cooperatio­n with China should be as equal states before internatio­nal law.

* * * Catch Sapol radio show, Saturdays, 8-10 a.m., DWIZ (882-AM).

Gotcha archives on Facebook: https:// www.facebook.com/pages/Jarius-Bondoc/1376602159­218459, or The STAR website http://www.philstar.com/author/ Jarius%20Bondoc/GOTCHA

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines