Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH, CHINA PURSUE ENERGY DEV’T IN SEA

The two countries signed 29 agreements during the state visit of Chinese President Xi Jinping, who vowed cooperatio­n with the Philippine­s for peace in the South China Sea.

- STORY BY CHRISTINE O. AVENDAÑO

China and the Philippine­s on Tuesday agreed to cooperate for the developmen­t of energy sources in the South China Sea as visiting Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed that Beijing would work with Manila to “manage contentiou­s issues” in the heavily disputed waterway.

“China and the Philippine­s have a lot of common interests in the [South China Sea]. We will continue to manage contentiou­s issues, promote maritime cooperatio­n through friendly consultati­on,” Xi said on Tuesday night, reading from a statement during his meeting with President Duterte in Malacañang.

Xi also promised that China would workwith the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) for the conclusion of a code of conduct for all claimants in the South China Sea.

Code in three years

“[W]e will work alongside other Asean countries toward the conclusion of the code of conduct based on consensus within three years and contribute our share to peace and stability and to welfare in this region,” he said.

The Philippine­s and China signed 29 agreements on Tuesday night, including a Memorandum of Understand­ing on Cooperatio­n on Oil and Gas Developmen­t.

Xi and President Duterte oversaw the signing of the agreements after they emerged from a bilateral meeting.

The energy deal signed was not the joint exploratio­n agreement widely expected to be signed during Xi’s visit.

A source with knowledge of the oil and gas agreement said the deal contained “basic principles” and did not indicate the location in the South China Sea of the two countries’ cooperatio­n.

In his statement, Mr. Duterte did not mention the oil and gas developmen­t agreement, but said he and Xi discussed “mutual concerns on defense, security and maritime cooperatio­n, law enforcemen­t, transnatio­nal crime and strengthen­ing of partnershi­p in combating illegal drugs” during their meeting.

“I am pleased with the current positive momentum of the Philippine­s-Chinese relations,” Mr. Duterte said, adding there was now “deepening trust and confidence” between the two countries.

He said they also discussed China’s participat­ion in his “Build, Build, Build” infrastruc­ture program as well as the rehabilita­tion of Marawi City, which was destroyed in a battle for control between government forces and Islamic militants last year.

Sovereign equality

“With mutual respect, sincerity and adherence to the sovereign equality, I will continue to work closely with President Xi to deepen the relationsh­ip between our countries so we may together secure a peaceful and prosperous future for both our peoples and the entire region,” Mr. Duterte said.

The agreements signed by the two countries included cooperatio­n in trade and investment, banking and finance, infrastruc­ture, agricultur­e, education and culture, and peopleto-people exchanges.

The Palace had not released copies of the agreements as of press time.

Xi earlier received a red-carpet welcome to Malacañang from President Duterte and his daughter, Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte, as he began his state visit to the Philippine­s.

‘Historic occasion’

After military honors on the Palace grounds, Xi and Mr. Duterte went in for their bilateral meeting.

In his welcome remarks, Mr. Duterte described Xi’s visit as “a historic occasion,” as it was the first state visit by a Chinese president to the Philippine­s in 13 years.

“Today is a landmark moment in our shared history. We have turned a new page and we are ready to write a new chapter of openness and cooperatio­n,” Mr. Duterte said.

Xi thanked Mr. Duterte for the warm welcome, saying he was “deeply moved” by the sight of schoolchil­dren and other local people who lined the road as he made his way to the Palace.

“My visit will be a milestone in the history of exchange between our two countries,” Xi said.

Manila’s relations with Beijing stagnated over longseethi­ng territoria­l rifts in the South China Sea until Mr. Duterte won the presidency in mid-2016 and rebuilt ties with China while often pillorying US security policies in a dramatic pivot.

The administra­tion of Mr. Duterte’s predecesso­r, Benigno Aquino III, brought the dispute with China over the strategic waterway to internatio­nal arbitratio­n and won, but China has ignored the outcome.

Duterte rapprochem­ent

Mr. Duterte has refused to immediatel­y demand Chinese compliance with the arbitral ruling, which invalidate­d China’s sweeping claim to the South China Sea, where Beijing has transforme­d a string of disputed reefs into missile-protected island bases.

His rapprochem­ent has fostered a new era of warming re- lations with the Asian economic powerhouse, with which he has sought trade and investment, infrastruc­ture financing and weapons to fight insurgents.

While Western government­s have sharply criticized Mr. Duterte’s brutal crackdown on illegal drugs, China has not.

But China has also been slow to open its purse to the Philippine­s.

Mr. Duterte was promised $24 billion in Chinese loans and investment pledges during his visit to Beijing in 2016.

Bureaucrat­ic delay

But only a fraction, or $140 million, has been given so far.

Asked about it on Tuesday, Mr. Duterte’s spokespers­on, Salvador Panelo, said the “bureaucrac­y” of both countries had to be considered, as both nations had stringent requiremen­ts for infrastruc­ture projects.

“So it takes time. Hopefully, we will hurdle all these problems,” Panelo said.

 ?? —LYN RILLON ?? BOOSTING BILATERAL TIES President Duterte and visiting Chinese President Xi Jinping preside over an expanded bilateral meeting at Malacañang’s Aguinaldo State Dining Room on Tuesday before overseeing the signing of 29 agreements, including a Memorandum of Understand­ing on Cooperatio­n on Oil and Gas Developmen­t.
—LYN RILLON BOOSTING BILATERAL TIES President Duterte and visiting Chinese President Xi Jinping preside over an expanded bilateral meeting at Malacañang’s Aguinaldo State Dining Room on Tuesday before overseeing the signing of 29 agreements, including a Memorandum of Understand­ing on Cooperatio­n on Oil and Gas Developmen­t.

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