China reacted furiously to
the verdict by a UN-back tribunal on Tuesday, insisting it will ignore the
decision while warning its rivals too much pressure on the issue could turn the
resource-rich and strategically vital waterway into a “cradle of war”.
The Philippines urged
Beijing on Thursday to respect an international tribunal’s ruling that rejected
Chinese claims to most of the South China Sea, escalating a row that has raised
the prospect of conflict.
The Philippines, which
launched the legal challenge, had initially refrained from asking China to
abide by the ruling. This followed President Rodrigo Duterte’s directive to
achieve a “soft landing” with the Philippines’ much more powerful Asian
neighbour.
But Manila hardened its
stance on Thursday with a statement detailing Foreign Secretary Perfecto
Yasay’s priorities when he attends an Asia-Europe summit, known as ASEM, in
Mongolia this week along with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang.
“Secretary Yasay will discuss
within the context of ASEM’s agenda the Philippines’ peaceful and rules-based
approach on the South China Sea and the need for parties to respect the recent
decision,” the foreign affairs department said in a statement.
Even just raising the issue
at the two-day summit starting on Friday will anger China, which has long
bridled at Philippine efforts to have the dispute discussed at multilateral
events.
Chinese assistant foreign
minister Kong Xuanyou insisted on Monday the ASEM summit was “not an appropriate
venue” to discuss the South China Sea.
But China appears to be in
the minority — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also said Thursday as he left
for Mongolia that he wanted to discuss the South China Sea at the summit.
China claims nearly all of
the sea — which is of immense military importance and through which about $5
trillion worth of shipping trade passes annually — even waters approaching the
coasts of the Philippines and other Southeast Asian nations.
China justifies its claims
by saying it was the first to have discovered, named and exploited the sea, and
outlines its territory using a vague map made up of nine dashes that emerged in
the 1940s.
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