Argentinean Asia expert: China must withdraw from Vietnam’s
waters
China must withdraw its oil rig from
Vietnam’s waters and seek a diplomatic and peaceful solution to disputes in
the East Sea, Ezequiel Ramoneda, coordinator of the Centre for Southeast
Asian Studies at Argentina’s National University of La Plata, has said.
He said China’s illegal placement of the oil rig
Haiyang Shiyou-981 at Lot 143 in the East Sea violated the 1982 United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982 UNCLOS), since this area is
deep inside Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), where Vietnam has
sovereign right and jurisdiction.
Ramoneda supported Vietnam’s
stance of promoting negotiations on the basis of international law to solve
disputes with China.
According to 1982 UNCLOS, as a coastal country, Vietnam has
sovereignty over all natural resource as well as drilling and exploiting
activities for economic purposes in its EEZ and continental shelf. However, China’s illegal positioning of the oil rig
ignored Vietnam’s
legitimate sovereignty over Hoang Sa (Paracel) Archipelago, he said.
He noted that China’s
move has political motivation and was timed ahead of the 24th ASEAN Summit in
Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar,
on May 10-11. China
positioned its rig to show off its strength to the 10 ASEAN member nations,
including Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia,
Brunei and the Philippines,
with whom it is locking horns over sea and island disputes.
He added that the act was also timed to follow US
President Barack Obama’s tour of Asian countries, including the Philippines and Malaysia,
which indirectly created competition between China
and the US.
Ramoneda said it is obvious that China is not seeking a
diplomatic and peaceful solution to the East Sea issues, but is instead elevating
tensions and risks of instability in the region.
The expert stressed that China’s
act not only violated 1982 UNCLOS but also ran counter to the Declaration on
the Conduct of Parties in the East Sea, agreed upon by China and ASEAN countries in 2002,
along with agreements reached by its officials and Vietnamese counterparts.
In terms of politics, China’s actions in sea disputes
with Southeast Asian countries and other nations fan the risks of an arms
race and trigger a diplomatic crisis in the region, he said.
Regarding economics, the move jeopardises ASEAN - China free trade agreements and the
negotiation on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership agreement that
China
is pushing.
China will suffer
from economic losses rather than gains in case of political crises and
military conflicts set off by its unilateral use of force to take control of
resources in the East
Sea, he noted.
On May 2, China illegally stationed the
Haiyang Shiyou-981 oil rig at 15 degrees 29 minutes 58 seconds north latitude
and 111 degrees 12 minutes 06 seconds east longitude. The location is 80
nautical miles deep inside Vietnam’s
exclusive economic zone.
It has also deployed a large number of ships of various
kinds to the area, including military, coast guard, marine surveillance,
marine patrol and fisheries vessels.
Chinese ships have repeatedly rammed and fired water
cannons into Vietnamese coast guard and fisheries surveillance boats which
are carrying out their law enforcement missions in the country’s waters,
leaving many Vietnamese ships damaged and many fisheries surveillance
officers injured.
Source: VNA/VNN
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