Bangkok Post

Beijing denies monitoring station exists

Ministry rebukes island facility remark

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BEIJING: China is not building an environmen­tal monitoring station on a disputed South China Sea shoal, the foreign ministry said, apparently denying remarks made by a local official last week that prompted a request for clarificat­ion from rival claimant the Philippine­s.

Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said reports about the facility on Scarboroug­h Shoal had been checked and were found to be false.

“That does not exist at all,” Ms Hua told reporters at a regularly scheduled news briefing.

The official Hainan Daily newspaper had quoted the top official in Sansha City, which administer­s China’s island claims, as saying that preparator­y work on the station was among the government’s top priorities for 2017.

Such a move would likely renew concerns among Beijing’s neighbours over its assertive territoria­l claims in the sea. Calls to Sansha government offices rang unanswered.

Beijing seized tiny, uninhabite­d Scarboroug­h in 2012 after a tense standoff with Philippine vessels. Manila said on Wednesday it had asked for a clarificat­ion of the earlier remarks by Shansha Communist Party head Xiao Jie.

Acting Philippine Foreign Secretary Enrique Manalo told Filipino reporters in Bangkok, where President Rodrigo Duterte was visiting, that his department asked for clarificat­ion of the reported planned constructi­on on Scarboroug­h Shoal.

“I think the president has been very clear — we want to have a peaceful, diplomatic settlement of disputes but we will not fail to protect our national interests if necessary,’’ Mr Manalo said.

Asked if a diplomatic protest would be filed, he said Manila will wait for China’s reply. But Mr Manalo said he considered it a good sign that China was interested in concluding a framework for a “code of conduct” with 10 Southeast Asian nations that aims to peacefully manage disputes in the South China Sea. He said there could be progress on the framework when China hosts a meeting in May.

China’s constructi­on and land reclamatio­n work in the South China Sea have drawn strong criticism from the US and others, who accuse Beijing of further militarisi­ng the region and altering geography to bolster its claims. China says the seven man-made islands in the disputed Spratly group, which it has equipped with airstrips and military installati­ons, are mainly for civilian purposes and to boost safety for fishing and maritime trade.

Prior to the announceme­nt, South China Sea tensions had eased somewhat after Beijing erupted in fury last year following an internatio­nal arbitratio­n tribunal ruling on a case filed by the Philippine­s. The verdict invalidate­d China’s sweeping territoria­l claims and determined that China had violated the rights of Filipinos to fish at Scarboroug­h Shoal.

China has since allowed Filipino fishermen to return to the shoal following Mr Duterte’s calls for closer ties between the countries, but it does not recognise the tribunal’s ruling as valid.

In her remarks, Ms Hua reiterated Beijing’s desire for good relations with the Philippine­s, a US treaty partner that has been drawing closer to China since Mr Duterte’s inaugurati­on last year. China will “cherish the good momentum of the bilateral relationsh­ip and will be committed to pushing forward the sound, steady and rapid growth of the relationsh­ip”, Ms Hua said.

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