The Free Press Journal

China activities on South China Sea irks US, allies

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The United States, Australia and Japan on Monday denounced Beijing’s island-building and militarisa­tion of the South China Sea, in contrast to the increasing­ly tepid response from Southeast Asian nations over the festering issue.

China claims nearly all of the sea, through which USD 5 trillion in annual shipping trade passes and which is believed to sit atop vast oil and gas deposits.

Its sweeping claims overlap with Vietnam, the Philippine­s, Malaysia and Brunei — all members of the 10- nation Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) bloc — as well as Taiwan.

But in recent years Beijing has managed to weaken regional resistance by courting some ASEAN members.

On Sunday, Beijing scored a coup when ASEAN ministers issued a diluted statement on the dispute and agreed to Beijing’s terms on talks during a security forum which the bloc is hosting in Manila.

China insists that a much-delayed code of conduct between it and ASEAN members over the disputed sea must not be legally binding, a demand to which Southeast Asian countries have so far acquiesced.

But in a joint statement after their foreign ministers met on the sidelines of the same gathering, the US, Japan and Australia delivered a noticeably sterner rebuke to Beijing.

Criticisin­g ongoing “land reclamatio­n, constructi­on of outposts, militarisa­tion of disputed features” in the disputed sea, the trio said any code of conduct must be “legally binding, meaningful and effective”, a demand noticeably absent from the ASEAN statement.

The three nations also called on China and the Philippine­s to respect last year’s internatio­nal arbitratio­n ruling which dismissed much of Beijing’s claim in the sea.

The Philippine­s had been one of the most vocal critics of China and filed a case before a UN-backed tribunal.

But after the election of President Rodrigo Duterte last year, Manila has played down the verdict in favour of pursuing warmer ties with Beijing, a move that led to offers of billions of dollars in investment­s or aid from China.

Critics of China have accused it of assiduousl­y dividing ASEAN, which operates on a consensus basis, with strong-arm tactics and chequebook diplomacy, enticing smaller countries in the bloc such as Cambodia and Laos to support it.

Criticisin­g ongoing land reclamatio­n, building of outposts, militarisa­tion of disputed features in the disputed sea, the trio said any code of conduct must be legally binding, meaningful and effective

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