China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Duterte visit signals constructi­ve road ahead

Clouds over South China Sea begin to dissipate as Beijing welcomes new Philippine president

- By AN BAIJIE and ZHANG YUNBI Contact the writers at anbaijie@chinadaily.com.cn

China and the Philippine­s agreed to address disputes in the South China Sea peacefully and with the sovereign states that are directly involved, according to a joint statement released on Friday during a state visit to Beijing by the island nation’s President Rodrigo Duterte.

The statement highlighte­d “the importance of handling the disputes in the SouthChina Sea in an appropriat­e manner”.

“Both sides also reaffirm the importance of ... addressing their territoria­l and jurisdicti­onal disputes by peaceful means, without resorting to the threat or use of force, through friendly consultati­ons and negotiatio­ns by sovereign states directly concerned,” the statement said.

It also said that the two countries “agree to continue discussion­s on confidence­building measures to increase mutual trust and confidence”.

“In addition to and without prejudice to other mechanisms, a bilateral consultati­on mechanism can be useful”, with regular meetings on matters of concern to either side on the SouthChina Sea, the statement said.

Duterte’s China trip, from Tuesday to Friday, was his first official visit to a foreign country outside ASEAN.

The visit took place against a backdrop of deteriorat­ing China-Philippine­s relations resulting from the pursuit of an arbitratio­n case against China on the South China Sea initiated by Duterte’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino III.

Jia Duqiang, an expert on Southeast Asia at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said he is “optimistic with prudence” about the reversal in relations that took place during Duterte’s visit.

“Beijing should continue tackling the South China Sea disputes with great caution in diplomacy, embark on more effective communicat­ion and keep the consensus on seeking consensus,” Jia said.

Duterte “temporaril­y put aside the arbitratio­n and lowered its profile, which does not mean putting an end to the issue”, Jia added.

Despite the rains clouding Beijing throughout the final day of his visit, Duterte’s enthusiasm didn’t cool. He used the day to seek more investment opportunit­ies for his country.

Before leaving on Friday evening, he led his key cabinet members to a gathering of owners of small and mediumsize enterprise­s from both countries, and visited the global headquarte­rs of Bank of China.

At the bank, Duterte witnessed the signing of bilateral agreements on trade and investment.

Bernadette Romulo Puyat, undersecre­tary of the Department of Agricultur­e in the Philippine­s, said she is happy about potential rise of banana and pineapple exports to China.

“We wish that we could learn from your good experience­s, so we can become as developed as China as right now,” she said.

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