Sun.Star Cebu

China and us

- JUN LEDESMA opinion@sunstar.com.ph SunStar Davao

What makes the Philippine-China relations so distinct from the other countries that China had engaged with? Is it on account of its strategic navigation­al route that can spell the difference between victory and defeat in commerce and trade and armed conflict or it is simply on account of a special avuncular regard of the Chinese leadership for the Philippine­s?

I found some answers in a free-wheeling discussion with Bai Tian, former deputy director-general at the Asian Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in China and in charge of Asean affairs. A group of Manila-based journalist­s that I had the privilege to tag along with visited his office in Beijing in September of 2015.

He was a bit emotional when he talked about the Philippine­s. He said that he stayed for a long time in the country and he described how he relished his stay here. He lamented why the Aquino mouthpiece­s created scenarios like referring to China as a bully out to make war against the Philippine­s over the disputed islands. “You do not burn the house of your next door neighbor,” he intoned.

Indeed, it is foolhardy for China to create conflict in the sea that spans the two countries. That is the only navigation­al route for China’s trade and is extremely important to sustain and strengthen its position as the second biggest economy in the world.

President Xi Jinping has adequately prepared for this economic and diplomatic thrusts. China establishe­d the Asian Infrastruc­ture and Investment Bank and, aside from this, a couple of trillion dollars from the government’s coffers to back it up.

The West is not comfortabl­e with this. Each time China anchors in a distant country and brings with it cheap loan package to finance infrastruc­ture programs, the Western press warn of a potential “debt trap.” They have convenient­ly stonewalle­d the expensive loans that the West extends to countries it purports to help.

The Philippine­s though have yet to see the color of China’s much ballyhooed bundles of funds to finance the country’s Build, Build, Build program. Both the United States and China woo the Philippine­s for its vital location. The US however always treated the Philippine­s like a mendicant that can be satisfied with a morsel.

I want to believe that China’s Supreme Leader visited here to personally deliver a loan package for the 70 big-ticket projects of the Duterte government valued at $35 billion. If so, this will mark the golden era of Philippine­s-China relations.

I do not know whether President Xi will be interested to see the bedroom of Duterte and the ever-present kolambo. Then maybe in his native art of diplomacy the President can tell Xi to open China’s market for more bananas and tuna from Davao.

Wishful thinking for one who dwells in the boondocks of Mindanao? Libre ang mangarap. And this Mindanaowo­n also hopes that the two leaders had decided to convert those installati­ons in the disputed Scarboroug­h shoal into one big marine laboratory manned by Filipino and Chinese scientists and declare its perimeter a no-fishing zone. This way the marine resource will be preserved and fishes can propagate for future generation­s.--from

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