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  Home > Philippines


Duterte Charting Own Course


Philippines’ president-elect Rodrigo Duterte AFP PHOTO / MANMAN DEJETO

 


 June 2nd, 2016  |  08:27 AM  |   2579 views

MANILA, PHILIPPINES

 

Multilateral talks to settle territorial dispute eyed

 

Incoming President Rodrigo Duterte said on Tuesday his country would not rely on long-term security ally the United States, signaling greater independence from Washington in dealing with China and the disputed West Philippine Sea (South China Sea).

 

The Philippines has traditionally been one of Washington’s staunchest supporters in its standoff with Beijing over the South China Sea, a vital trade route where China has built artificial islands, airstrips, and other military facilities.

 

Duterte, the tough-talking mayor of Davao City who swept to victory in the May 9 election, has backed multilateral talks to settle rows over the South China Sea that would include the United States, Japan, and Australia as well as claimant nations.

 

RESPECT EEZ

 

He has also called on China, which claims most of the sea, to respect the 200 nautical mile Exclusive Economic Zone granted to coastal states under international law.

 

Asked by reporters if he would push for bilateral talks with China, Duterte replied: “We have this pact with the West, but I want everybody to know that we will be charting a course of our own.

 

“It will not be dependent on America. And it will be a line that is not intended to please anybody but the Filipino interest.”

 

Asked about Duterte’s comments at a State Department briefing, Daniel Russel, the assistant secretary of state for East Asia and the Pacific, said the United States had “no problem whatsoever” with bilateral talks among the South China Sea claimants.

 

Russel noted that some disputes in the South China Sea were by their nature multilateral and could not be resolved on a bilateral basis, but added “those that can, we’re all for it.” Duterte made his comments as he was unveiling his Cabinet line-up a day after a joint session of Congress declared him the election winner. He formally takes over as president on June 30.

 

Key ministerial appointments went mainly to conventional choices, a decision likely to allay nerves among foreign and domestic investors about a lurch away from reforms that have generated robust economic growth.

 

They also may point to a bid to resolve differences over the South China Sea.

 

The Philippines, Brunei, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Taiwan have overlapping claims to waters rich in oil and gas and through which trillions of dollars’ worth of trade pass each year.

 

Duterte’s pick for foreign secretary, Perfecto Yasay, has sounded a conciliatory note.

 

“I don’t think that there is another way of resolving this dispute except talking to each other,” Yasay told reporters this week. “We certainly would like to make sure that we are able to resume bilateral talks because these are necessary.”

 

NOT SO CLEAR CUT

 

Muddying the picture somewhat was the choice of former Marine Captain Nicanor Faeldon, who led a coup bid against then President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo about a decade ago, as head of the Bureau of Customs, the country’s second-largest agency in terms of revenue.

 

In December, Faeldon took a group of Filipino protesters to the disputed Pag-asa Island in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea that is held by the Philippines, triggering an angry response from Beijing.

 

Before Duterte’s election, the Philippines also took the dispute to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, although China does not recognize the case. A ruling is expected in the coming weeks.

 

“I am waiting for the arbitration,” Duterte said of the process, when asked about investment prospects with China.

 

“It will impact on us in so many fronts … I would like to wait for this, then, with the advice of the Cabinet, I might be able to proceed. But you know, I am not ready to go to war. It will just result in a massacre.”

 


 

Source:
courtesy of MANILA BULLETIN

by Reuters

 

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