The Philippine Star

‘Co-ownership of West Phl Sea a surrender to China’

- By JESS DIAZ – With Christina Mendez

President Duterte’s equating joint exploratio­n in the West Philippine Sea with “coownershi­p” of resources is a sellout to China, leftist partylist group Bayan Muna said yesterday.

“It can be interprete­d not only as a sellout but as total surrender of our national territory to the Chinese,” Bayan Muna Rep. Carlos Zarate said.

“It sends a dangerousl­y wrong message that the Duterte administra­tion disregards our hard won victory at the Internatio­nal Tribunal on the Law of the Sea,” he said

Zarate recalled that on July 12, 2016, the tribunal, in a 501page award, decided in favor of the Philippine­s and declared that China does not have historic rights to the South China Sea or West Philippine Sea, and that its “nine-dash line” claim had no legal basis. Beijing vowed not to comply with the ruling issued by Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n based in The Hague.

Zarate said Duterte’s coownershi­p statement “is reversing our country’s historic victory at the internatio­nal tribunal and he is now giving the West Philippine Sea to China on a silver platter.”

“Justifying the arrangemen­t with China as co-ownership can even be construed as capitulati­on to China’s militariza­tion program in the area,” he said.

He said the Chinese became aggressive in the disputed territorie­s after they completed a joint marine seismic research during the Arroyo administra­tion.

China saw the resources those areas hold and have since militarize­d them, he added.

In Marawi City on Wednesday, Duterte said China has offered joint exploratio­n in some of the disputed islets and features in the West Philippine Sea.

It’s like co-ownership and it’s better than fighting the Chinese, he said.

Zarate said some of the contested sea features clearly belong to the Philippine­s, as they are within the country’s 200-mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ).

“Recto Bank or Reed Bank, for instance, which is not far from Palawan and which is reportedly rich in natural gas and oil, is within our EEZ. It should be ours. The President should not declare it as coowned by China,” he said.

In fact, Zarate said previous administra­tions had awarded contracts to Filipino companies to explore for natural gas in Recto Bank.

He added the Duterte government should resume exploratio­n in that area even if China opposes it.

Zarate pointed out the country was considerin­g sourcing natural gas from Recto Bank as the nearby Malampaya gas is drying up.

For his part, Rep. Antonio Tinio of Alliance of Concerned Teachers said the President’s co-ownership statement “indicates that Duterte is prepared to give away our national patrimony in the West Philippine Sea…and to throw the favorable internatio­nal court ruling in the gutter.”

“He has thoroughly exposed himself as the principal agent of Chinese economic, political, and military expansion in the Philippine­s,” he said.

Former national security adviser and Parañaque representa­tive Roilo Golez urged Malacañang to clarify Duterte’s pronouncem­ent of “co-ownership” with Beijing.

“This thing needs immediate Palace clarificat­ion. If not, it might affect our legal position. Those kind of statements can be used against our own legal position because in tends to show that we are acknowledg­ing China’s ownership of whatever percentage there is in our very West Philippine Sea. I am just hoping the President was simply misquoted,” Golez said.

He said the internatio­nal arbitral ruling is clear that not a single square inch in the West Philippine Sea is owned by China.

Golez pointed out the internatio­nal tribunal ruling in favor of the Philippine­s has become part of an internatio­nal law that must be respected and adhered to.

An agreement

But Malacañang said a joint exploratio­n is only an agreement like “between two corporate entities.”

“We are not entering into a sovereign agreement for exploratio­n. It will be an agreement, if we do, between two corporate entities,” presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque said.

Roque cited as precedent the Joint Marine Seismic Undertakin­g (JMSU) entered into by the Philippine­s and China during the Arroyo administra­tion.

Roque stressed that allowing a private firm to start joint exploratio­n with a Chinese group anytime soon under the present administra­tion would not be tantamount to surrenderi­ng the country’s sovereign rights over areas clearly within Philippine territory.

“This is now a result of that Joint Seismic Maritime Exploratio­n Agreement. This will now actually entail joint exploratio­n and possible exploitati­on of natural resources,” Roque said.

“So we’ve gone beyond determinin­g if there are resources, they’re convinced there are resources – the only issue now is, is it commercial­ly viable. That’s good news,” he added.

The JMSU is a tripartite agreement between the Philippine­s, China and Vietnam to conduct seismic exploratio­n in an area spanning 142,886 square meters west of Palawan.

Legal luminaries have argued the 1987 Constituti­on explicitly provides that the state shall have full control and supervisio­n over the exploratio­n, developmen­t and utilizatio­n of the country’s natural resources, including marine wealth in its archipelag­ic waters, territoria­l seat and exclusive economic zone. The use and enjoyment of the resources are exclusive to Filipino citizens.

They also pointed out that the government could allow services or the contract of services of corporatio­ns wholly or 60 percent owned by Filipinos.

The Philippine­s suspended exploratio­n in the Reed Bank in 2014 as it pursued internatio­nal arbitratio­n to challenge Beijing’s massive territoria­l claim.

 ??  ?? Firetrucks blast colored water into the air to mark the start of Fire Prevention Month at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila yesterday. Story on Page 8.
Firetrucks blast colored water into the air to mark the start of Fire Prevention Month at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila yesterday. Story on Page 8.

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