Dayton Daily News

Xi: Talks on pact to avoid sea clashes may finish in 3 years

- By Jim Gomez

Chinese MANILA, PHILIPPINE­S — President Xi Jinping said Tuesday negotiatio­ns between Beijing and Southeast Asian nations on a nonaggress­ion pact to prevent clashes in the disputed South China Sea could be concluded in three years and promised that any difference­s will be dealt with peacefully.

Xi made the assurances after talks with President Rodrigo Duterte and other officials on a visit to the Philippine­s aimed at deepening relations with the American treaty ally.

Xi’s overnight visit to the Philippine capital, Manila, was his last stop on a three-nation swing through Asia, where he has offered infrastruc­ture loans and aid and championed free trade amid a rivalry for regional influence with the United States.

“We will continue to manage contentiou­s issues and promote maritime cooperatio­n through friendly consultati­on,” Xi said. He said China aims to conclude the talks on the “code of conduct” in the disputed waters with the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations within three years.

Four members of the 10-nation bloc — Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s and Vietnam — along with China and Taiwan have overlappin­g claims in the South China Sea. Many fear the long-simmering disputes could spark an armed conflict that could shatter Asia’s bustling economies.

Ahead of Xi’s visit, China and the Philippine­s tried to negotiate an agreement allowing joint oil and gas exploratio­n in the disputed waters but apparently did not reach a consensus. They signed a “memorandum of understand­ing on cooperatio­n on oil and gas developmen­t” on Tuesday, but officials provided few details.

“It’s a cooperatio­n to find ways to find a solution,” Philippine Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said of the agreement.

China has sought a “maritime and air liaison mechanism,” an arrangemen­t for forces of the two countries to coordinate their naval and aircraft movements to prevent incidents in the contested waters, but the proposal has been opposed by Philippine defense officials, two Philippine officials told The Associated Press.

There was no mention of the pact after Tuesday’s meetings.

Filipino nationalis­ts have warned that any agreement that can undermine the Philippine­s’ internatio­nally recognized exclusive rights to fish and exploit resources within 200 nautical miles of the country’s coast would violate the Philippine Constituti­on.

Beijing’s relations with Manila deteriorat­ed over the territoria­l rifts until Duterte won the presidency in mid2016 and sought to rebuild ties with China while criticizin­g U.S. security policies in a dramatic pivot. The administra­tion of Duterte’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino III, had brought the territoria­l disputes with China to internatio­nal arbitratio­n and won, but China has ignored the outcome.

Duterte has refused to immediatel­y demand Chinese compliance with the ruling, which invalidate­d China’s sweeping claims to the waters, where Beijing has transforme­d a string of disputed reefs into missile-protected island bases.

Duterte’s rapprochem­ent has fostered a new era of warmer relations with the Asian economic powerhouse, from which he has sought trade and investment, infrastruc­ture financing and weapons to fight insurgents.

While Western government­s have sharply criticized Duterte’s brutal crackdown on illegal drugs, China has not. Both Xi and Duterte have often been in the crosshairs of human rights groups.

Xi said he and Duterte “agreed to elevate our relationsh­ip into one of comprehens­ive, strategic cooperatio­n,” adding, “it sends a strong message to the world that our two countries are partners in seeking common developmen­t.”

Xi’s visit to the Philippine­s is the first by a Chinese president in 13 years.

More than 300 protesters with placards reading “Hands off our land and seas” rallied in front of the Chinese Consulate in Manila. Another group of protesters later burned mock Chinese flags near the presidenti­al palace, where Xi and Duterte met.

Duterte said Philippine participat­ion in Beijing’s “Belt and Road Initiative” was discussed and Xi invited the Philippine leader to attend the infrastruc­ture loan program’s second internatio­nal forum in China next year.

The ambitious program has been criticized by the United States as enticing poor nations into debt bondage and has warned it could compromise their independen­ce. Xi has denied that Chinese loans could lead to a “debt trap.”

Aside from their trade disputes, China and the United States have wrestled over Beijing’s assertive claims to the South China Sea. Chinese officials have asked Washington to back off from what they say is a purely Asian dispute, but the U.S. has vowed to maintain a presence in the waters, where it has no claims but has pledged to promote freedom of navigation and overflight.

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