Philippine Daily Inquirer

CHINESE COAST GUARDS DRIVE AWAY PH BOAT

- By Gabriel Cardinoza @gabrielcar­dinozaINQ

Chinese coast guards drove away a Philippine commercial fishing vessel from Panatag Shoal in the West Philippine Sea on March 13, two days before former Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario and former Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales sued China’s President Xi Jinping for crimes against humanity in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), fishermen here reported on Saturday.

With sirens blaring, the Chinese came in rubber boats and encircled the Philippine vessel, said Yoyoy Rizol, a fisherman from Infanta, Pangasinan province, who witnessed the incident from his boat.

Rizol said the skipper of the Philippine fishing boat spoke to the Chinese coast guards then steered his vessel away from the shoal.

“We later learned that the boat was from the Visayas,” he said.

Manila-Beijing deal

It is unclear why the Chinese coast guards drove away the Philippine fishing vessel from Panatag when there is an agreement between the Philippine and Chinese government­s that Filipinos will be allowed in the fishing ground known internatio­nally as Scarboroug­h Shoal.

Ronnie Lebios, 43, a fishermanw­ho also witnessed the in- cident from another boat, said the Philippine fishing vessel was as large as those used by the Chinese fishermen in hauling giant clams from Panatag Shoal’s lagoon.

Lebios said the Philippine vessel was towing 12 service boats, each of which could carry 15 people.

China seized Panatag Shoal after a two-month maritime standoff with the Philippine­s in 2012, forcing the administra­tion of then President Benigno Aquino III to challenge in the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in The Hague China’s claim over nearly the entire South China Sea, including parts of the West Philippine Sea, waters within the country’s 370-kilometer exclusive economic zone in the strategic waterway.

The UN-backed tribunal ruled in favor of the Philippine­s in July 2016, declaring China’s claim invalid under internatio­nal law and pronouncin­g China in violation of the Philippine­s’ sovereign right to fish and explore resources in the West Philippine Sea.

China ignored the ruling, which, according to Tan Qinsheng, chargé d’affaires at the Chinese Embassy in Manila, is also what Beijing will do with the complaint brought by Del Rosario and Morales against Xi.

Takeover plan

Acting on behalf of Filipino fishermen and peoples of the coastal states on the South China Sea, Del Rosario and Morales brought the communi- cation against Xi and other Chinese officials, accusing them of crimes against humanity for implementi­ng China’s plan to take over the waterway that included grabbing contested islands and closing off traditiona­l fishing grounds, depriving people in the region food and livelihood.

Tan said on Friday that China had no plan of answering the complaint.

“I’m sure what they have done or what they will do, will not be able to represent the views of the Philippine government and people. Those actions will in no way stop the developmen­t of bilateral relations,” Tan said.

China-PH relations

That is also what President Duterte said on Thursday after learning about the filing of the informatio­n in the ICC.

“They (Del Rosario and Morales) are entitled to file the case, and I will say there is no jurisdicti­on of this country and of China. Even more so with China,” Mr. Duterte said.

The complaint will not affect China-Philippine­s relations, he said.

China never signed the Rome Statute that created the ICC, while Mr. Duterte withdrew the Philippine­s from the treaty last year after the tribunal opened a preliminar­y examinatio­n of a communicat­ion against him about the thousands of killings in his brutal war on drugs.

The Philippine withdrawal became official on March 17.

On Friday, the Chinese foreign ministry said Beijing appreciate­d Mr. Duterte’s statement.

A few people’s action

At a press briefing in Beijing on Friday, foreign ministry spokespers­on Geng Shuang said China’s position on the South China Sea dispute had always been consistent and clear, noting that China’s joint efforts with countries in the region had ensured developmen­ts in the waterway had gone in “the right direction.”

“In this context, the actions of a few people to stir up a fuss won’t result in any big trouble. Neither will it affect or damage bilateral ties,” Geng said.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra on Sunday said he expected the ICC to dismiss Del Rosario and Morales’ complaint, as the court had no jurisdicti­on over China, which was never a state party to the Rome Statute.

Guevarra also claimed the ICC’s limited jurisdicti­on in prosecutin­g individual­s for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity worked against Del Rosario and Morales’ communicat­ion.

“The [communicat­ion] against President Xi is really a political statement more than a legal action, intended to achieve a political result rather than a legal victory,” Guevarra said.

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