Beijing turns the tables on Manila for resuming works in the South China
Sea.
China slammed the Philippines for its hypocrisy on the South China Sea
after Manila said that it would resume repair and reconstruction works there,
news outlets reported Friday.
While the
Philippines had halted such activities last year and suggested other countries
do so as well because it was concerned about potential effects on its ongoing
legal case against China, Foreign Minister Albert del Rosario had said Thursday
that it would resume some activities. The move came amid massive Chinese land
reclamation efforts there which Philippine officials say is designed to bolster
Beijing’s territorial claims and alter the status quo before any legal verdict
is even reached by the arbitral tribunal at The Hague.
But on
Friday, China used del Rosario’s comments as an opportunity to turn the tables
on the Philippines. According to Reuters, foreign policy spokesman Hua
Chunying said China was now
“seriously concerned” by Manila’s decision to resume works in the South China
Sea, which was both an infringement of Beijing’s sovereignty and hypocritical.
“On the
one hand the Philippines makes unreasonable criticism about China’s normal
building activities on its own isles, and on the other announces it will resume
repairs on an airport, runway and other illegal constructions on China’s
Spratly Islands, which it illegally occupies,” Hua said.
“This is
not only a series infringement of China’s sovereignty, but it also exposes the
Philippines’ hypocrisy,” she noted at a news
briefing. She also called on the Philippines to withdraw from the islands.
Foreign
Minister Albert del Rosario had emphasized Thursday in his remarks that the
Philippines would only be proceeding on repair and maintenance in the South
China Sea, and such works – which would include repairs on an airstrip – would
not violate the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China
Sea because it did not alter the status quo dramatically.
“We are
taking the position that we can proceed with the repair and maintenance,” del
Rosario said according to Reuters.
This was
in stark contrast to China’s massive land reclamation activities, which del
Rosario said aimed to change the status quo and enforce its infamous nine-dash
line claim to control almost the whole South China Sea.
“China is
accelerating its expansionist agenda and changing the status quo to actualize
its nine-dash line claim and to control nearly the entire South China Sea
before…the handing down of a decision of the arbitral tribunal on the Philippine
submission,” he said. By Prashanth Parameswaran
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