Philippine Daily Inquirer

EXPERTS URGE FIGHT VS COUNTRIES THAT THINK ‘MIGHT MAKES RIGHT’

- By Jerome Aning @JeromeAnin­gINQ

Populist leaders and powerful countries are underminin­g the internatio­nal rule of law with their “might makes right” stance, but nations around the world should resist such a position to protect global order, diplomats and foreign relations experts said on Friday.

Visiting British Minister of State for Asia and Pacific Affairs Mark Field said the rules-based internatio­nal system had “a hugely positive impact on global security and prosperity, protecting people and countries, and helping them to achieve their potential.”

“This rules-based internatio­nal system is a network of agreements and institutio­ns that requires our support if it is to continue to protect us and make us more prosperous,” he said. “If we stand back—perhaps in the hope of some possible short-term gain—we will all be worse off in the long run.”

Freedom of navigation

Speaking at a Stratbase-ADR Institute for Strategic and Inter- national Studies (ADRi) forum in Taguig City, Field said it was “unfortunat­e” that some leaders were intent on “flouting and underminin­g” the rules-based internatio­nal system.

He referred to Russia, which he said was responsibl­e for a chemical attack against a former Russian spy in the English town of Salisbury in March.

Field also cited the maritime dispute in the South China Sea, which was the subject of an ar- bitration case won by the Philippine­s against China in 2016 but ignored by Beijing.

Field urged all territoria­l claimants to respect freedom of navigation and internatio­nal law, including the 2016 decision of the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n to reject China’s sweeping claims over virtually the entire waterway.

“It is critical for regional stability, and for the integrity of the rules-based internatio­nal system, that disputes in the region are resolved, not through force, militariza­tion or coercion, but through dialogue and in accordance with internatio­nal law,” he said.

Australia’s ambassador to the Philippine­s, Amanda Gorely, said the adoption of a code of conduct in the South China Sea by China and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) would allow claimant states to “cooperate and negotiate to resolve difference­s rather than resorting to the use of threat or force.”

The Philippine­s, three other Asean countries—Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei—China and Taiwan have overlappin­g claims to islands and reefs in the South China Sea, one of the busiest in the world and believed to be rich in marine and underwater mineral resources.

Decrease tensions

“As a supporter of a rulesbased order,” Gorely said, “Australia believes that the negotiatio­n of a code of conduct for the South China Sea has a potential to help manage the disputes and decrease the tensions.”

ADRi board chair and former Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said the rise of a rulesbased internatio­nal system had been the “great equalizer” in global affairs and the “bedrock of peace, order and fairness in modern societies.”

“Internatio­nal law has given equal voice to nations regardless of political, economic or military stature, banning the unlawful use of sheer force,” he said.

China’s actions in the region, he said, remained to be one of the “most important and contentiou­s” external threats not only to the Philippine­s but to the Asia-Pacific region.

He said China had “unceasingl­y refused to accept the arbitral ruling that is now an integral part of internatio­nal law” while depriving the Philippine­s of its “sovereign rights.”

Raul Pangalanga­n, a judge on the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) and former law dean of the University of the Philippine­s, said “the best way to strengthen the rule of law internatio­nally is to first strengthen it domestical­ly.”

He said some countries, many of them in Asia, remained hesitant to submit to the ICC, despite its “fixed rules” in handling cases.

“I think it has less to do with the fact that we are internatio­nal. It has more to do with the fact that we are a court,” he said.

Mutual appeasemen­t

Asian government­s prefer a mediator whose goal is the “mutual appeasemen­t of warring tribes” and who will come up with a ruling acceptable to the parties rather than a judgment on who is right and wrong, he said.

He made no direct reference to President Duterte, who has decided to withdraw the Philippine­s’ ratificati­on of the Rome Statute, due to “baseless” accusation­s against him by UN officials and alleged violations of due process by the ICC.

Mr. Duterte made the decision in May following an announceme­nt by ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda that she would start a preliminar­y examinatio­n of a complaint accusing him of crimes against humanity in connection with his bloody war on drugs.

 ??  ?? Raul Pangalanga­n
Raul Pangalanga­n
 ??  ?? Albert del Rosario
Albert del Rosario

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