Philippine Daily Inquirer

Work with China but stick to our claims, envoy advises

- By Estrella Torres

ALTHOUGH neither China nor the Philippine­s may be ready to give up their respective maritime claims, it may be possible to work out cooperativ­e agreements on fishing, private oil and gas exploratio­n, and avoiding conflict due to accidental incidents, a foreign officer said yesterday.

Ambassador Rosario Manalo, a partici- pant in a recent conference on the South China Sea attended by experts from the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), made the remarks after a high-level team led by former President Fidel Ramos returned from China and described the overall tone of initial talks as “encouragin­g.”

“The political will [of China and the Philippine­s] is the key to settling the disputes in the South China Sea,” Manalo said.

Manalo expressed support for the diplomatic track taken by the Duterte administra­tion which is to open direct talks with China within the framework of a regional Code of Conduct in the South China Sea. Ramos; mission last week was to explore the possibilit­y of opening talks with China and find a peaceful solution to the disputes over ownership of Scarboroug­h Shoal off Zambales and the Spratley islands off Palawan, among others.

Realist, pragmatic

“President Duterte is a realist and a pragmatic man,” Manalo said . “The Duterte administra­tion is moving in the right direction that will benefit both China and the Philippine­s.”

Her view was that if the tension eased, the Philippine­s and China could sign a cooperatio­n agreement over accidental incidents in the disputed waters of the South China Sea or West Philippine Sea.

At the same time, Manalo said private firms from the two countries could be left to talk about exploratio­n of resources, including oil and gas sharing. The cooperatio­n could include a fisheries agreement to allow fishermen from the two nations to exploit sea resources in the constested areas.

The diplomatic negotiatio­ns may take five to 15 years, she said. But it’s important to keep the two parties “talking rather than fighting” which is the rule of thumb in internatio­nal diplomacy.

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