Philippines committed to South China Sea code of conduct
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The Philippines and neighbour China have been at loggerheads this past year over maritime territory, with Manila accusing Beijing of repeatedly committing aggressive acts inside its exclusive economic zone.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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MANILA – The Philippines is firmly committed to negotiations for a code of conduct between China and South-east Asian countries to avert confrontations in the South China Sea, its foreign minister said on Feb 15.
Foreign Secretary Enrique Manalo also said tensions in the South China Sea were not all about a rivalry between superpowers the United States and China, and that the Philippines, and others, had legitimate rights and interests to uphold.
Such a view of the tensions will “not help in an honest understanding of the situation”, he told reporters.
“It obscures good judgment; actions that are clearly illegal in international law and against the UN Charter are sometimes rationalised under the pretext of this rivalry.”
He also voiced concern about regional tensions over nearby Taiwan and urged all parties to remain in direct contact.
The idea of a code of conduct was hatched more than two decades ago, but parties only committed to begin the process in 2017
Little progress has been made, however, with negotiations on the contents of the code yet to move forward.
The issue is highly sensitive, with China’s neighbours keen to base the code on international law, which Beijing has repeatedly been accused of disregarding in asserting its claim to sovereignty over 90 per cent of the South China Sea, despite that being dismissed by an international arbitration court.
“We are concerned about developments in our exclusive economic zone (EEZ),” Mr Manalo said.
The Philippines and neighbour China have been at loggerheads
China has chided the Philippines for encroaching on what it says is its territory.
The row has intensified at a time when the Philippines has ramped up defence engagements with the US
Mr Manalo said a high-level “two plus two” meeting of the defence and foreign ministers of the Philippines and the US was planned but dates were not yet finalised. REUTERS

