Philippine Daily Inquirer

CHINA SEA ROW ‘BALANCING ACT’

- By DJ Yap @deejayapIN­Q —WITH A REPORT FROM MARC JAYSON CAYABYAB INQ

The Philippine­s is trying to balance territoria­l sovereignt­y with other national interests in its foreign relations, Foreign Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano said.

“The work is a balancing act, your honors,” Cayetano told congressme­n during a House foreign affairs committee hearing on Tuesday.

“The disputes, for example, in South China Sea are unlike [that in the] East China Sea. There are overlappin­g claims with Malaysia, Brunei, Vietnam and Taiwan,” Cayetano said.

Hostility or prosperity

“If we’re going to be aggressive against all of them, we will lose out in trade, investment­s and tourism,” he said.

Already, Cayetano said the Philippine­s was lagging behind other members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations in terms of trade with China.

Moreover, he said surveys revealed that 70 percent of Filipinos considered themselves poor and were mainly concerned with health, education, peace and order and other basic services.

“That is more or less the specifics of our national interest,” he said. “The basis of our foreign policy should take that in account.”

Besides, he said the 1987 Constituti­on already defined the scope of the “independen­t foreign policy” that Mr. Duterte wanted to pursue.

“The paramount considera- tions are national sovereignt­y, territoria­l integrity, national interest and right to self-determinat­ion,” he said.

“As you can see, it is an enumeratio­n. It is not a priority list. The Constituti­on directs us to ensure all four,” Cayetano said.

“There’s no argument. We will not compromise our territoria­l integrity just to get tourists [and] investment­s.”

No sell out

“[But] we cannot go head on with other countries just for the sake of territoria­l integrity without thinking of the national interest,” he said.

Cayetano also belied claims that President Duterte has junked the favorable ruling the country received from the United Nations-backed Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in 2015.

“It’s not true that the President [junked] the arbitratio­n award,” said Cayetano, explaining the President only decided not to take up the matter at this time in order to improve ties with China.

Cayetano asked lawmakers for a closed door executive session to show congressme­n “some things that have been classified confidenti­al or secret,” including the possibilit­y of joint exploratio­n and developmen­t in the disputed Spratly Islands.

“I will assure you, any legal framework will conform with local laws and the Constituti­on,” Cayetano said.

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