Otago Daily Times

China, Philippine­s agree to avoid force in South China Sea dispute

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BEIJING/MANILA: China and the Philippine­s have agreed to avoid force to resolve their difference­s over the South China Sea, according to a joint statement issued yesterday by China at the end of a visit to Manila by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang.

China and the Philippine­s have long sparred over the South China Sea, but relations have improved considerab­ly under Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte.

Malaysia, Taiwan, Brunei, Vietnam and the Philippine­s claim some or all of the South China Sea and its myriad shoals, reefs and islands. China claims most of the waterway and has been aggressive­ly building and militarisi­ng artificial islands.

The joint statement, carried by China’s official Xinhua news agency, said China and the Philippine­s reaffirmed the importance of peace in the South China Sea and of freedom of navigation and overflight.

There should be no violence or threats of violence and the dispute should be resolved via talks between the ‘‘relevant sovereign countries’’, it added.

‘‘Both sides believe that the maritime dispute is not the full sum of the ChinaPhili­ppines relationsh­ip,’’ the statement said.

In a separate statement summing up discussion­s at the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations summit, Duterte took note of the ‘‘improving relations between Asean and China’’ in the South China Sea.

‘‘In view of this positive momentum, we looked forward to the announceme­nt of the start of substantiv­e negotiatio­ns on the code of conduct (COC) with China’’ he said, hopefully in early 2018 in Vietnam, where the two sides will meet at the earliest.

Asean and China have been discussing a set of rules on how to behave in the disputed waters to avoid accidents and raising tension.

Duterte said the two sides also had successful­ly tested the hotline among foreign ministries on how to manage maritime emergencie­s.

‘‘In our view, these are practical measures that could reduce tensions, and the risks of accidents, misunderst­andings and miscalcula­tion,’’ he said. — Reuters

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