The Borneo Post

China slams Philippine­s’ definition of ‘reef’

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BEIJING: As Asia’s biggest security summit is set to convene, China on Friday accused the Philippine­s of seeking to negate its sovereignt­y in the South China Sea by describing Taiping Island as a reef and not an island in Manila’s territoria­l court case.

Tensions in the South China Sea are set to dominate the Shangri-La Dialogue ( SLD) starting Friday, exposing a deepening rivalry between the United States and China ahead of a landmark legal ruling over the disputed area in the Hague.

Beijing refuses to recognise the case lodged by the Philippine­s with the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in The Hague over territoria­l claims in the South China Sea and says such disputes should be resolved through bilateral talks.

Manila is challengin­g the legality of China’s claim there, in part by arguing that no land mass in the Spratly archipelag­o, including Itu Aba, known as Taiping Island in Chinese, can legally be considered a lifesustai­ning island.

That would mean it cannot hold rights to a 200 nautical mile ( 370 km) exclusive economic zone.

“The Philippine­s’ attempt to define Taiping Island as a ‘reef’ exposes that the goal of its arbitratio­n case is to try to negate China’s sovereignt­y and related rights over the Spratly Islands,” China’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said.

“This is a violation of internatio­nal law and completely unacceptab­le,” Hua said in a statement posted to the ministry’s website.

Chinese fishermen had historical­ly lived on Itu Aba year-round, and fished, dug wells, cultivated plants and constructe­d buildings, all evidence that it was an island capable of sustaining human life and economic activity, Hua said.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea, through which about US$ 5 trillion worth of shipborne goods passes every year. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims to the waters.

Self-ruled Taiwan controls Itu Aba, which some analysts believe has the strongest claim to island status and an economic zone. Late last year it finished a US$ 100 million port upgrade on Itu Aba, which has an airstrip, a hospital and fresh water.

China, which claims sovereignt­y over Taiwan, has appeared unruffled by Taiwan’s upgrading work on Itu Aba. Military strategist­s say that is because it could fall into China’s hands should it ever take over Taiwan.

Taiwan in May called on the internatio­nal court not to make a ruling on the legal status of Itu Aba in the South China Sea case if the judges don’t visit first to see for themselves it can sustain life. — Reuters

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