The Philippine Star

Locsin wants ‘offensive’ map scene deleted from ‘Abominable’

- By PIA LEE-BRAGO

The Philippine­s’ top diplomat has suggested a “universal boycott” of DreamWorks movies in the country following an animated film’s depiction of China’s nine-dash line in the South China Sea.

“For me call a universal boycott of all @Dreamworks production­s from here on,” Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin

Jr. posted on his Twitter account on Tuesday night.

He later emphasized that he only “suggested” a boycott, and proposed to have the offending scene cut out instead.

Locsin’s tweets came after Vietnam pulled the animated DreamWorks film Abominable from the country’s cinemas over a scene featuring a map showing China’s unilateral­ly declared “nine-dash line” in the South China Sea.

Maritime law expert Jay Batongbaca­l replied to Locsin in a tweet stating that a “call for boycott should still be made as a strong statement against such tactics, also so as to not contribute to CN (China) coffers by seeing the movie, and send message to US companies partnering w/ CN propagandi­sts to stop enabling such moves.”

Replying to Batongbaca­l, Locsin clarified also in a tweet, “I am not sending any f ***** g message. A general boycott isn’t my duty but I’ve suggested it. All @Dreamworks production­s, no re-runs – IF that’s not an unconstitu­tional denial of Filipinos’ right to see what they want; not what some f ***** g natives think they should or should not.”

Batongbaca­l, director of the University of the Philippine­s Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea, pointed out that the Movie and Television Review and Classifica­tion Board (MTRCB) technicall­y has the power to require deletion of objectiona­ble portions of films for reasons that include being “injurious to the prestige of the Republic of the Philippine­s or its people” (Presidenti­al Decree 1986, sec. 3, para. c), which is “what this does if we quietly allow it to be shown without some form of protest.”

Since there is no ground to ban the film, Locsin said the “offending” Chinese map scene depicting Beijing’s ninedash line should be removed instead of banning the movie in the country.

“Of course they should cut out the offending scene which will show our displeasur­e better than if we unconstitu­tionally ban it as some suggest,” Locsin tweeted.

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