Philippine Daily Inquirer

In troubled world, Games bind political wounds Phurged: Seekunforc­e Sino boats P-noy calls for calm catch fish, but says we are ready get corals off Pag-asa

- By Redempto Anda By Christian V. Esguerra

PUERTO PRINCESA CITY—Under the protective watch of warships, Chinese fishing vessels anchored off the Philippine-occupied Pag-asa Island in the disputed Spratly archipelag­o in the West Philippine Sea operated at will on Thursday, catching fish but mainly collecting corals in large quantities.

The fishing boats were only 9 kilometers from Pag-asa, that municipal employees on the island could clearly see them using winches and booms to haul corals from the seabed to wooden “sampans” (junks), said Mayor Eugenio Bito-onon of Kalayaan, which governs Pagasa and four other islets in the Spratlys claimed by the Philippine­s.

“Our people, the civilian staff of the municipali­ty of Kalayaan, wanted to stop them yesterday,” Bito-onon said. “I had to ask them to stand down and just monitor the developmen­ts for now.”

The mayor said his staff observed the Chinese fishermen

Text INQ ON BREAKING to 4467 rigging steel cables to large coral heads to pull them up using winches. The rocks were then hauled into larger ships using booms.

Bito-onon, who has been in Puerto Princesa since early this

Twitter: @inquirerdo­tnet

Muntinlupa Rep. Rodolfo Biazon, chair of the House committee on national defense, raised the question of asking for UN help amid reports that a large fleet of Chinese fishing vessels had been sighted near Pag-asa Island in the Philippine part of the Spratly archipelag­o.

The military’s Western Command confirmed the sighting on Wednesday, and the Navy said yesterday that it had vessels ready to stop the Chinese fishing fleet from entering Philippine territory.

“We will assert our sovereignt­y in that area because that’s our territory,” Commodore Rustom Peña, commander of the military’s Naval Forces West, told

Twitter: @dzIQ990 LONDON—The London Olympics 2012 opening ceremony will be a spine-tingling extravagan­za that exceeds expectatio­ns, thrilled audience members said after witnessing the final rehearsal for Friday’s showpiece spectacula­r.

And despite their excitement, those lucky enough to get a sneak peek vowed to keep the surprises secret after the show’s Oscar-winning director Danny Boyle pleaded with them not to ruin it by giving the game away.

Organizing the Olympics is estimated to cost British taxpayers $14.4 billion. (

Games volunteers and troops were given tickets to the final run-through as a thank-you for their efforts, while members of the 15,000strong cast were able to reserve tickets for friends and family.

The 60,000-odd crowd seemed filled with enthusiasm as they flooded out of the Olympic Stadium late Wednesday.

“That was absolutely amazing. I wanted to whoop,” said Hilary Midgley from Darwen in northwest England, whose daughter was in the show.

“She hadn’t told us anything so we didn’t know what to expect. She told us how

/ A12

WITH China aggressive­ly asserting its claims in the West Philippine Sea, a lawmaker suggested yesterday that it might be time for the Philippine­s to ask the United Nations for a peacekeepi­ng force to prevent armed clashes between the two countries in the disputed waters.

reporters in an interview yesterday.

But President Aquino called for calm, saying the government was looking for a peaceful resolution of the Philippine­s’ territoria­l dispute with China.

Reporters asked Mr. Aquino pointblank: Is the Philippine­s ready for war?

“We are always ready,” he replied, but quickly added that his government stressed the search for a peaceful resolution of the conflict.

Mr. Aquino answered reporters’ questions on the side-

lines of ceremonies at the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), which celebrated its 114th anniversar­y yesterday that coincided with the 148th birth anniversar­y of Apolinario Mabini, the brains of the Philippine Revolution against Spain.

The President refused to comment on the report that the Chinese fishing fleet was accompanie­d by two warships. The whole world “could testify” to what is happening at Panatag Shoal, Mr. Aquino said, referring to a shoal in the West Philippine Sea claimed by both China and the Philippine­s.

China sent a fleet of 30 fishing vessels to the Spratlys on July 11, a month after Vietnam passed a new maritime law that put the archipelag­o and the Paracel Islands under its sovereignt­y.

China is claiming the Paracels and the Spratlys, and has put them under its administra­tion through a new city called Sansha in June to strengthen its grip on the disputed territorie­s in the West Philippine Sea.

The Philippine­s, Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan are claiming parts of the Spratlys. But China claims all of those islands as well as other rock and coral formations in the West Philippine Sea believed to be sitting on vast oil and gas deposits. The islands also straddle major sea lanes vital to global trade.

The Philippine­s refers to the strategic waterway as the West Philippine Sea. China calls it the South China Sea while Vietnam refers to it as the East Sea.

The Chinese fishing fleet, accompanie­d by a cargo vessel and two People’s Liberation Army missile frigates, arrived on the Vietnamese side of the Spratlys on July 15.

On Wednesday, the Philippine military reported sighting 20 of the Chinese fishing vessels to have moved close to Pag-asa Island on the Philippine side of the Spratlys.

Presence confirmed

Commodore Peña confirmed the INQUIRER report yesterday about the Chinese fishing fleet’s latest location.

He said 20 fishing vessels were anchored 9 kilometers off Pagasa Island, the seat of government of the Kalayaan municipali­ty in Palawan province.

Controlled by the Philippine­s since the 1970s, Pag-asa Island is located 527 km west of Palawan. It is home to 150 Filipino families. It has a town hall, a health center, an airstrip and a naval station. In June the local government opened a public school on the island.

Peña said there were no sightings of the reported military escort of the fishing fleet. “There are no other vessels there,” he said.

Asked about his assessment of the situation, Peña said he had no authority to make an assessment. “It’s the DFA which issues statements and assessment­s,” he said.

But the DFA was not ready with a statement. Raul Hernandez, DFA spokespers­on, said the department had yet to be formally informed about the situation.

“We have not received an official report from the Navy or the Coast Guard,” Hernandez said.

UN help

The report of the Chinese fishing fleet’s presence at the Philip- pines’ doorstep raised questions about the country’s capability to defend its territory.

Since it does not have the hardware to fight, shouldn’t the Philippine­s, which has already decided to seek internatio­nal arbitratio­n to settle its territoria­l dispute with China, go the United Nations for help?

Speaking at a news forum in Quezon City, Biazon, a former military chief of staff, suggested that the government ask the United Nations for a peacekeepi­ng force “if the tension rises to a dangerous level.”

He said the request could be included in the case to be brought by the DFA to the Internatio­nal Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (Itlos) for the settlement of the Philippine­s’ dispute with China over Panatag Shoal (Scarboroug­h Shoal) according to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos).

“What would prevent us from proposing (that) to the United Nations if the tension rises to a dangerous level?” Biazon said.

Unclos enforcemen­t

Reacting to an observatio­n that the Unclos did not have a clear process for enforcing Itlos rulings, Biazon said a peacekeepi­ng force could resolve that problem.

“Of what use is the Unclos, signed by 152 nations, if it cannot be enforced?” Biazon asked.

He pointed out that the Philippine­s had troops in UN peacekeepi­ng missions in conflict areas, among them the Golan Heights in the Middle East.

Both the Philippine­s and China are signatorie­s to the Unclos. Beijing, however, refuses to recognize Manila’s sovereignt­y over territorie­s in the West Philippine Sea that are within the country’s 370-kilometer exclusive economic zone, insisting that those are its territory.

China also rejects internatio­nal arbitratio­n to settle the dispute, insisting on bilateral talks with the Philippine­s, as it does in its disputes with other rivals for territory in the West Philippine Sea.

Biazon said the Philippine government should focus on the Unclos instead of acquiring warships and aircraft, though the country needs hardware, because the convention favored the country’s case.

Go back to Panatag

In the meantime, he said, the government should send back ships to Panatag Shoal to “show our flag” there.

Philippine and Chinese vessels faced off with each other at Panatag Shoal from early April to mid-June. The standoff temporaril­y ended when President Aquino ordered two government vessels to seek shelter from a storm on the night of June 15.

China called its fishing vessels home from the shoal, but not its maritime ships. President Aquino threatened to send back the Philippine vessels to the shoal unless China pulled out its maritime vessels as well.

China has not budged, and reports said Chinese fishing vessels had returned to Panatag Shoal.

Escorted fleet

Biazon said the Philippine­s should send a fleet of fishing vessels, escorted by the Coast Guard or even by the Navy, to the shoal to assert Philippine sovereignt­y.

He suggested the government should also repair or even expand the airstrip on Pag-asa Island.

Simultaneo­usly, he said, the Philippine­s should proceed with joint exploratio­n and developmen­t of energy resources within the country’s exclusive economic zone in the West Philippine Sea.

Biazon suggested partnershi­ps with Japan, South Korea, the United States or European countries.

He acknowledg­ed that such steps could increase tensions in the West Philippine Sea but he said the Philippine­s should not back down just because of a potential heightenin­g of tensions.

Cautious Navy

Still, the Navy will handle an incursion in the Spratlys with caution.

“Wewill investigat­e [their presence] and then if the situation warrants, we will advise them that that’s our territory and that they should leave,” Peña said, referring to the Chinese fishing vessels anchored off Pag-asa Island.

“Once the weather gets better, we will send our boats to warn them to leave our area,” he said. “We have boats ready to be deployed there.”

 ?? Friday, July 27, 2012
11 sections / Vol. 27
/ No. 229
P18
AP ?? Mobile Alert:
www.inquirer.net SEARCHLIGH­TS illuminate the Olympic Stadium in London during a rehearsal for the opening ceremony on Friday (Saturday morning in Manila). Volunteers who took part in the run-through described the secrecy-shrouded...
Friday, July 27, 2012 11 sections / Vol. 27 / No. 229 P18 AP Mobile Alert: www.inquirer.net SEARCHLIGH­TS illuminate the Olympic Stadium in London during a rehearsal for the opening ceremony on Friday (Saturday morning in Manila). Volunteers who took part in the run-through described the secrecy-shrouded...
 ?? PHOTO FROM THE WESTERN COMMAND ?? CORAL RAIDERS Fourteen fishing vessels, part of a fleet that left Hainan on July 11, catch fish and collect rare corals 9 kilometers east of Pag-asa Island in the West Philippine Sea.
PHOTO FROM THE WESTERN COMMAND CORAL RAIDERS Fourteen fishing vessels, part of a fleet that left Hainan on July 11, catch fish and collect rare corals 9 kilometers east of Pag-asa Island in the West Philippine Sea.
 ?? PHOTOFROMT­HE WESTERNCOM­MAND ??
PHOTOFROMT­HE WESTERNCOM­MAND

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