The Philippine Star

All conflictin­g claims in SCS won’t be resolved — Locsin

- PIA LEE-BRAGO By – With Ghio Ong, Robertzon Ramirez, Cecille Suerte Felipe

There is no end in sight to the South China Sea dispute as the people’s “attachment­s” to their ideas are “too strong” to weaken with time, Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said on Wednesday.

“All the conflictin­g claims in the South China Sea will not be resolved,” Locsin said in a speech at the celebratio­n of the 54th National Day of Singapore.

He said it was a vision of Singapore foreign minister Vivian Balakrishn­an, “which I share with as much optimism.” Balakrishn­an earlier said a resolution of the South China Sea dispute would not be easy, even as talks for a code of conduct are under way.

“The attachment­s of each people to their ideas of what they are entitled to are too strong and will not weaken with time, I said. And yet, said Vivian, nothing will stand in the way of limitless progress, prosperity and, I dare say, peace for our region,” Locsin said.

In his speech, Locsin called Singapore a “paragon” of flawless modernity, innovation and efficiency.

Contempora­ry Singapore, he said, represents the very vision and aspiration of many nations built on honest, superintel­ligent, determined and visionary leadership as well the discipline of its multiethni­c population.

“Singapore harnessed its strengths which were weaknesses elsewhere: the wide diversity of its people; the poverty and deprivatio­n of their origin in Malay tin mining for the most part; and the animosity of near neighbors,” Locsin said.

Sen. Risa Hontiveros, meanwhile, filed a resolution calling on the Senate to probe the possible maritime and security implicatio­ns of a reported government plan to allow Chinese “investors” to develop three islands into tourism destinatio­ns.

Hontiveros said the proposed Senate Resolution No. 74 seeks to investigat­e the strategic security implicatio­ns of the developmen­ts by foreigners of Fuga, Grande and Chiquita islands, as well as the property formerly known as island Cove Resort.

She said Fuga in Cagayan province and the Grande and Chiquita islands in Subic Bay, Zambales province play strategic roles in the country’s national security. “Are we witnessing a creeping annexation?” Hontiveros asked.

“Amid China’s aggressive behavior in the West Philippine Sea, it is baffling that the Duterte government allowed this to happen. These are no ordinary islands. These parcels of land are strategic maritime fronts that play a significan­t role in our military history, which only proves how invaluable they are to our national security,” she explained.

Hontiveros also brought up the developmen­t of the 32-hectare Island Cove Resort property in Kawit, Cavite, purchased by a still-unknown investor and converted into a Philippine Offshore Gaming Operator (POGO) complex with housing facilities for an estimated 20,000 foreign workers.

Island Cove is approximat­ely 3.5 kilometers from Danilo Atienza Air Base, home of the Philippine Air Force’s 15th Strike Wing, and Naval Base Heracleo Alano, home of the Naval Sea System Command, which operates the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP)’s largest industrial complex – a military shipyard providing repair and maintenanc­e for all Navy ships and aircraft.

It was reported that the country’s unregulate­d POGO industry led to an influx of illegal Chinese workers in the Philippine­s.

Hontiveros said the country’s national security is apparently under threat due to questionab­le Chinese infrastruc­ture investment­s.

“We look to the Senate to rise to the occasion and to seek the truth. We hope that the investigat­ion is conducted through the lens of Filipino values that uphold our integrity, sovereignt­y and dignity,” Hontiveros said.

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