The Philippine Star

Cayetano: Duterte’s handling of dispute with China ‘beneficial’

- By HELEN FLORES

The current diplomatic handling of the territoria­l dispute with China has benefited the Philippine­s, unlike the “loud” and “aggressive” approach taken by the previous Aquino administra­tion, Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano said yesterday.

“When President Duterte came in, Philippine­s was speaking loudly, and maybe correctly so at that time against China, and harnessing public support and internatio­nalizing the issues, (while) China on the other hand was gaining ground... completely controllin­g Scarboroug­h (Panatag) Shoal and then of course the building and everything,” Cayetano said in an interview with CNN Philippine­s.

“The Aquino strategy is loud but what’s the end?” he said.

What resulted from the previous administra­tion’s aggressive approach was Filipino fishermen’s getting barred from Panatag Shoal.

Cayetano said critics continue their attacks against Duterte apparently to force him to adopt the strategy of the previous administra­tion.

“What will happen (if we follow the Aquino approach), our fishermen can’t fish, our agricultur­al products will not enter their market, our tourism will not (grow). We’re resultorie­nted, to talk is easy,” he said.

“If that kind of action would give these results, I’ll do that action,” the country’s top diplomat said.

Recently, Filipino fishermen at Panatag Shoal complained about Chinese coast guards seizing sizeable portions of their catch in exchange for noodles and bottled water.

Chinese Ambassador Zhao Jianhua earlier said these were isolated incidents but promised to punish erring coast guards.

Panatag, one of the land features in the West Philippine Sea, came under China’s control in 2012 after a standoff that resulted from Chinese surveillan­ce vessels’ preventing Philippine Navy boats from arresting Chinese poachers. Panatag is well within the Philippine­s’ 200-mile exclusive economic zone.

The July 2016 ruling of the United Nations-backed arbitral tribunal declared Panatag Shoal a traditiona­l fishing ground for Filipinos, Chinese and Vietnamese fishermen.

Asked whether the Philippine­s really benefitted from the arbitral ruling, Cayetano said the country “won on paper but lost on grounds.”

“Experts outside of the Philippine­s asked me who’s the biggest winner in the arbitratio­n, I said the Philippine­s, (but) they said the name of the other country and they told me why and they have a point,” he said.

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