Philippine Daily Inquirer

Puff, the frantic dragon

-

PRESIDENT AQUINO will bring up China’s massive reclamatio­n works at the 26th Asean summit in Kuala Lumpur next week—a move well-advised because it is both wise and strategic.

It opens up yet another battlefron­t where we can engage the Chinese behemoth in the contest over the West Philippine Sea, namely, the issue of environmen­tal protection caused by China’s destructio­n of coral reefs and harvest of endangered species. It mobilizes an entirely new alliance of green activists to find common cause with the Philippine­s. It dares the erstwhile fence-sitters to step down and forward on one of the most compelling causes of the 21st century: the preservati­on of our planet’s fragile ecosystems.

For a long time, the Philippine­s was virtually alone in parrying China’s incursions in the disputed waters; the rest of the world casually looked the other way lest they displease the economic and political giant that has laid claim to almost the entire South China Sea, riding roughshod over the exclusive economic zones of all the coastal states along the way. China has long ignored the internatio­nal rules laid down in treaties that it has signed, and “[has] made the law its perch and not its terror.” But today our Department of Foreign Affairs is vigilant and ready to protest each incursion with timely and categorica­l notes verbale.

Again, for a long time, China pooh-poohed these protests and dared us to back them with military threats. But not anymore. The Philippine­s has filed suit at an internatio­nal arbitral tribunal at The Hague, and has become the poster boy for small countries standing up to regional bullies. While these states still prefer to cheer from the sidelines and leave the actual jousting to us, it is still a world away from those lonely times in the past when China could hose down and fire at our fishing boats with impunity.

We thus shifted the battle away from armed confrontat­ions where might made right, toward legal arenas where the playing field is less skewed in its favor. No less than US President Barack Obama has called on China to respect internatio­nal law. “Where we get concerned with China is where it is not necessaril­y abiding by internatio­nal norms and rules, and is using its sheer size and muscle to force countries into subordinat­e positions,” Obama said. He concluded: “[J]ust because the Philippine­s or Vietnam are not as large as China doesn’t mean that they can just be elbowed aside.”

And now Mr. Aquino opens the battle on the environmen­tal front. No less than National Scientist for Marine Biology Edgardo Gomez, professor emeritus at the University of the Philippine­s, writes in a forthcomin­g essay in the INQUIRER’s Talk of the Town about the “unpreceden­ted environmen­tal havoc directly caused by man on the most productive and economical­ly valuable natural ecosystems on the planet.” He reminds us of the global project called the Coral Triangle Initiative that includes four Asean states (the Philippine­s, Indonesia, Malaysia and Timor-Leste), and focuses on coral reefs as the base ecosystem that supports the livelihood of hundreds of millions of people, providing food and many other ecosystem services.

Just last week, 24 Chinese vessels harvested giant clams, an endangered species. Gomez points out that there are “literally hundreds of tourist shops in Tanmen, Hainan … selling nothing but carved giant clam shells …! It would appear that because ivory is now a controlled substance that cannot be legitimate­ly sourced continuall­y, tridacnid clam shells are being used as a substitute substrate. The advertisem­ents in the shops promote their purchase by tourists by saying that the shells bring good luck as a Buddhist belief!”

We thus provide environmen­tal activists the world over with fresh evidence of yet another example of Chinese abuse of the earth’s resources. We remind them that China, not satisfied with having polluted its cities with emissions from coal-fired power plants, has now extended that abuse to internatio­nal waters far beyond its shores. We call on them to act because while there is little we can do if China poisons the air in Beijing, there is much we can do if it defiles the Coral Triangle. Wemake them realize that reclamatio­n is a serious matter, and that states have actually filed suit at internatio­nal tribunals over the environmen­tal costs of reclamatio­n projects.

In the past, we found it difficult to find allies when we invoked military and security concerns over China’s expansioni­sm. Today it is much easier to find friends with this initiative to save our planet. It is less politicall­y divisive, certainly more inclusive, and obviously more enduring.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines