Philippine Daily Inquirer

Viet leader opposes China’s sea claims

- AFP

WASHINGTON—Vietnam’s president on Thursday voiced firm opposition to China’s claims in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) but declined to back a Philippine bid to take the row to a United Nations (UN) tribunal.

On a visit to Washington, President Truong Tan Sang rejected China’s “nine-dashline map” through which it claims virtually all of the strategic sea, including islands close to neighborin­g countries.

“We cannot find any legal foundation or scientific basis for such a claim and therefore it is the consistent policy of Vietnam to oppose the ninedash-line plan by China,” Sang told the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

No comment

But Sang declined comment when asked if Vietnam would join the Philippine­s, which in January took its territoria­l dispute in the sea with China to the arbitratio­n panel of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea to declare China’s claims invalid.

“As a member of the United Nations, the Philippine­s has the legal right to carry on with any proceeding­s they would like,” Sang said.

The Philippine­s and Vietnam have led criticism of what they consider increasing­ly assertive claims by China in the West Philippine Sea.

Brunei and Malaysia, as well as Taiwan, also claim parts of the sea.

Tense relations

The Philippine­s has had especially tense relations with China, which seized the Panatag Shoal (Scarboroug­h Shoal), an outcrop within Manila’s economic exclusion zone, after a two-month naval standoff last year.

But friction has eased slightly between Vietnam and China, with Sang visiting Beijing last month and agreeing to set up a hot line to try to prevent mishaps from escalating.

China separately has increasing­ly butted heads with Japan, which fears that Beijing is trying to exert control over resource-rich waters in the East China Sea.

Sang earlier Thursday met US President Barack Obama, who encouraged calm in the West Philippine Sea.

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