Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Rammed fishing boat

- BY BONG O. WENCESLAO

THE Duterte administra­tion has been pushed into an awkward position on the reported ramming by a Chinese boat of a Filipino-owned fishing vessel in Recto Bank (a.k.a. Reed Bank) in the West Philippine Sea.

Reed Bank, the globally known name of the area, is within the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone (EEZ),

according to the internatio­nal tribunal based in The Hague, Netherland­s. But China covets it because it supposedly contains most of the oil and natural gas in the South China Sea (a part of which we call the West Philippine Sea).

F/B Gem-Ver was anchored in Recto Bank when the Chinese vessel intentiona­lly rammed it, according to the 22 fishermen on board the fishing boat. Instead of rescuing them, the crew of the Chinese vessel left them on their own, they added. The fishermen were then rescued by a passing Vietnamese vessel.

Instead of condemnati­on from the usually combative President Duterte, he was silent for days before finally dismissing the ramming as a mere “maritime incident.” Interestin­gly, the Chinese leadership labeled the ramming as a mere accident. All these came after Energy

Secretary Alfonso Cusi claimed the ramming probably wasn’t intentiona­l based on Gem-Ver’s damage.

It now looks like the Chinese and the Filipino leadership are one in downplayin­g the incident and making it appear like it is minor and therefore dismissibl­e. What they failed to reckon is that this has added to the anti-China sentiment that could be the Duterte government’s undoing.

Cusi is not with the Department of Foreign Affairs. Why he was the one who went out to talk with the fishermen and then took the lead in making light of the distressed fishermen’s story is an interestin­g twist on this issue. But wasn’t the Chinese and the Philippine leadership pushing for a joint exploratio­n of Recto Bank?

One major obstacle to that proposal is the refusal of China to acknowledg­e that Recto (or Reed) Bank is within the Philippine­s’ EEZ.

China is claiming ownership of almost the entire South China Sea through the so-called ninedash line that it arbitraril­y drew around a representa­tion of the South China Sea on its map.

Cusi is therefore cozying up to China. Is he trying to make China look good by going against the fishermen, who are Filipinos like him, in order for the public to embrace China as a partner in the exploitati­on of Recto Bank’s resources?

But it is not Cusi alone who seems to be lawyering for China on this issue. Everybody, from the President to even Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana, who seems to have mellowed after his combative stance on the ramming issue, are downplayin­g the matter. That, though, is not unpreceden­ted considerin­g how past Philippine leaders lawyered for the United States every time Americans committed abuses in the Philippine­s.

That was before Duterte’s current embrace of China.

The anti-US imperialis­m activists’ favorite term for that is “subservien­ce.” To the US before and now to China. I prefer to call that “puppetry.”

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