The Freeman

Phl losing arbitral ruling advantage in WPS – Robredo

- (Philstar.com)

MANILA — Vice President Leni Robredo on Thursday urged the Philippine­s to start planning how it could move forward in protecting its sovereignt­y in the South China Sea, two years after the court ruling was handed down.

Speaking at a forum marking the second anniversar­y of the ruling in Makati City, the vice president warned that the threat to Philippine sovereignt­y in the West Philippine Sea and Filipinos' security were the gravest and most alarming challenges facing the nation.

The West Philippine Sea is the part of the South China Sea that the Philippine­s claims.

"[O]f all the issues our country faces today, it is the threat to our sovereignt­y in the West Philippine Sea, and our people's security, that is most grave and alarming. They make our current challenges much harder to bear," Robredo said in her keynote address in which she described China's encroachme­nt on Philippine territory in the disputed seas as the "most serious threat to our country since World War II."

Robredo lamented the fact that the Philippine­s started to lose the advantage it gained through the arbitral award after Manila had chosen to set it aside while it pursued better relations with Beijing.

Robredo said that it was time for the country to protest peacefully any effort to limit or control movements in the disputed waters, through which around $3 trillion worth of trade passes, as well as the militariza­tion of the issue.

She said that it was important for Filipinos to know that there were remedies to the contentiou­s issue which would not warrant the declaratio­n of war.

"We want the world to know that, together, our nations can shine a path towards global peace, as advocates of the rule of law," she said.

In July 2016, several weeks into President Rodrigo Duterte's term, a United Nations-backed tribunal in the Hague issued the ruling that invalidate­d much of China's claims to the disputed waters, which were based on its so-called historical rights.

Despite the momentous decision, Duterte chose to back burn the decision in an effort to court Chinese money into the Philippine economy.

He said that he would raise the ruling with his Chinese counterpar­t, Xi Jinping, at the right time, adding that he could not afford to go to war with the superpower.

Despite the ruling, nothing much has changed, according to the vice president, who cited the recent report on a television station which showed that personnel of the Chinese coast guard were boarding Filipino fishing boats to get some of their prize catch.

 ??  ?? ROBREDO
ROBREDO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines