by Michaela Del Callar
Zambo Times, Philippines
Saturday, July 7. 2012
MANILA — The territorial disputes in the strategic West
Philippine Sea would likely steal the spotlight in next week’s
Association of South East Asian Nations Regional Forum (ARF) that would
be attended by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and 26 other
foreign ministers despite China’s objections.
Clinton and Southeast Asian nations at
odds with China over disputed territories in the resource-rich South
China Sea, or West Philippine Sea to Manila, plan to tackle the issue at
the ARF, Asia’s largest security forum, to be held July 8 to 12 in the
Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh.
The Philippine delegation led by
Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario is expected to raise the recent
conflicts between Manila and Beijing over the Bajo de Masinloc and the
Spratly Islands during the discussions under the topics, which,
according to a Department of Foreign Affairs statement, include
“maritime security” and “regional and international issues.”
China,
which claims the sea nearly in its entirety including in areas that
overlap with Philippine territories, has objected to efforts to bring
the sea disputes to any international arena.
Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said that next week’s ASEAN meetings
should not be used as a pulpit by claimant countries to ventilate the
issue, which it wants to be discussed bilaterally with each claimant
country like the Philippines and Vietnam.
“The Chinese side
believes that ARF Foreign Ministers Meetings is an important platform
for enhancing mutual trust and strengthening cooperation, not the right
place to discuss South China Sea issue,” Liu said in Beijing.
In
contrast, Philippine Foreign Affairs spokesman Raul Hernandez said “the
objective of the ARF is to allow member states to discuss and consult on
political and security issues of common interest and concern of members
states” such as the South China Sea disputes.
“And this issue is a regional issue. It’s a regional and political issue,” Hernandez told PNA.
US
State Department officials also plan to discuss the territorial
conflicts, expressing interest in pushing for a legally binding regional
code of conduct that would discourage aggression and prevent possible
armed confrontations in the South China Sea.
Although not a party
to the territorial row, Washington has declared that it is in its
national interest to ensure the conflicts are resolved peacefully and
that there is freedom of navigation in the busy waters, a strategic
shipping route where a large bulk of world trade passes through.
Vietnam
is also seen to raise the issue after it protested China’s plan to
offer oil and gas exploration service contracts to investors in nine
areas Hanoi says fall well within Vietnamese territory.
The
crowded ASEAN agenda in Phnom Penh also include non-proliferation, human
rights, protection of migrant workers, human trafficking, climate
change, disaster management, biodiversity, ASEAN community and
connectivity, trade and investments and micro small-medium enterprises,
and renewable energy.
But the long-simmering territorial rifts
have alarmed the rival countries as well as other Asian and western
nations which fear the conflicts could turn nasty and restrict free
access to the vital waters, also coveted for their potential oil and gas
deposits and abundant fish stocks.
At least three major island
groups are being contested by China and five other claimants – the
Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan.
The disputed
territories include the Spratly Islands and Bajo de Masinloc, where
China and the Philippines have had recent confrontations.
Host
Cambodia, a key Chinese ally in Asia, has been criticized for allegedly
towing Beijing's position, but its officials have given assurances they
would serve as an impartial chairman of this year’s meetings.
Philippine
officials, however, say Cambodia does not have much choice because any
member country can speak out and raise any issue when ASEAN ministers
meet informally during the so called "retreat sessions."
Many fear
the disputed South China Sea could spark Asia's next major armed
conflict but analysts predict major players like China and the US would
not risk starting an economically devastating armed confrontation.
The
proposed code of conduct in the South China Sea could keep things under
control and buy time for rival claimant countries to build trust,
perhaps, undertake joint development while the territorial disputes
remain unresolved.
But China and rival claimants like the
Philippines are divided as well on how the code should be shaped. The
meetings in Cambodia are aimed at sorting out those differences and
striking an elusive consensus.
The threat of a looming conflict,
uncertainties and unsettling tensions in the disputed waters may force
the rival nations to forge a consensus and agree on a code of conduct to
foster trust and cooperation in the contested areas while the
territorial disputes hang indefinitely. Or as they often say in ASEAN -
they can agree to disagree. (PNA)
FPV/MDC/utb
No comments:
Post a Comment