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Deploying more oil rigs, China turns East Sea
into its pond, int'l scholars
On the sidelines of the international
conference on Hoang Sa (Paracel), Truong Sa (Spratly) Islands in Da Nang on June 20-21, domestic and foreign scholars
expressed their concerns over China's
deployment of more oil rigs in the East
Sea.
On June 21, 2014 the delegates who
attended the International Workshop under the theme "Paracel and Spratly
Archipelagos: Historical Truths" held in Da Nang
inspect the fishing boat ĐNa 90152 which was slammed and sunk by China’s
vessels. This sunken boat was lifted from the water and pulled ashore. In the
photo: The delegates see with their eyes a large hole in the side of the
boat. Photo: VNA
Prof. Nguyen Quang Ngoc, deputy
chairman of the Vietnam
Historical Sciences Association:
The deployment of additional oil rigs in the East Sea
shows that China
will seek ways to realize its U-shaped claims.
It will not deploy just one oil rig but many other oil
rigs, more airports and will occupy more areas to gradually turn the East Sea
into a pond of their own.
China's strategy
has always been to move backward to go forward and going forward is to occupy
the entire East
Sea. Its plot to
monopolize the East
Sea is very clear.
Mr. Leszek Buszynski, from the National Security
College, Australian National
University:
It is likely that after 15/8 when China
withdrasw the HD-981 oil rig, the rig will be replaced by another one.
Of course the international community will condemn
them, warning that China's
national reputation will be damaged, but it is possible that China will continue to bully Vietnam.
Advisor for strategic issues of the
Southeast Asia Research Group, Subhash Kapila:
The new move of sending new oil rigs to the East Sea
shows that China
has embarked on a new strategy of "mobile sovereignty".
They hope that by bringing in more oil rigs, they will
reinforce their claims of sovereignty over the Paracel Islands.
Mr. Gerhard Will, expert of
Southeast Asia and Asia of the German Institute for International and
Security Affairs - SWP:
This is a move to increase tension, contrary to the
long-term economic interests of the East Sea
that the Chinese claimed.
The information about deploying additional drilling
rigs in the East
Sea, published in
Chinese newspapers, can target to to the Chinese public, through which the
Chinese government shows the Chinese people that "they have done
something."
China does not
have a clear and convincing strategy on the conduct in the East Sea.
It is also difficult to reach compromise or consensus on this issue in the
context of the nationalism is so high among the Chinese people.
Prof. Renato de Castro of the De la
Salle University, the Philippines:
If the first oil rig is targeted directly to Vietnam, the next oil rig is likely to be
aimed directly at the Philippines.
They will push Vietnam
and the Philippines
to be in the same boat. It is possible that this is China's reaction before Vietnam and the Philippines "playing
volleyball together" on one of the islands in the Spratly recently.
Professor Eric Franckx from
Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
If the oil rigs are deployed to different areas of the East Sea,
the countries concerned will be definitely uncomfortable.
So I think the Chinese are raising difficulties for
themselves when they make such moves. Such workshops will be held in Malaysia and the Philippines if the oil rigs are
pulled close to their waters. I believe that in those countries, the people
will be very angry - Thuy Chung
China sends four
oil rigs to East
Sea
According to Reuters, China
has sent four oil rigs into the East
Sea in a sign that Beijing
is stepping up its exploration for oil and gas in the tense region, less than
two months after it positioned a giant drilling platform in Vietnam's
waters.
Coordinates posted on the website of China's Maritime
Safety Administration showed the Nanhai number 2 and 5 rigs had been deployed
roughly between southern China
and the Pratas islands, which are occupied by Taiwan. The Nanhai 4 rig was
towed close to the Chinese coast.
The agency did not say who owns the rigs.
Earlier this week, it gave coordinates for a fourth
rig, the Nanhai 9, which it said would be positioned just outside Vietnam's
exclusive economic zone by Friday.
The Global Times, a popular tabloid published by the
Communist Party's official People's Daily, quoted Zhuang Guotu, director of
the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at Xiamen University, as calling the
rig deployment a "strategic move".
"The increase in oil rigs will inevitably jab a
sensitive nerve for Vietnam
and the Philippines,"
Zhuang said.
China's state oil
behemoth CNOOC Ltd has said it had four new projects scheduled to come on
stream in the western and eastern South China Sea
in the second half of 2014.
It was unclear if the four rigs were part of those projects.
A CNOOC spokesman declined to comment, but the company has long said that in
a bid to boost production it wanted to explore in deeper waters off China.
CNOOC has said it would increase by up to a third its
annual capital spending for 2014 to almost $20 billion. Reuters
Scholars suggest ways to counter China’s
actions
As China
has not put forth any persuasive evidence proving sovereignty over the two
groups of islands [Spratly and Paracel], Vietnam should use all legal
maneuvers available to demonstrate to the world that justice is on their
side.
International scholars, including those from the US, France,
Belgium, and Australia,
made the suggestions at an international conference in Danang city on June
20-21.
Their presentations made it clear that the Vietnamese
state has established and exercised its sovereignty over the Hoang Sa
(Paracel) and Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelagos peacefully and constantly and
in line with international law for centuries.
They once again criticized China’s
nine-dash line claim that covers more than 80% of the East Sea’s
area, affecting the interests of many coastal countries in the region.
General Daniel Schaeffer, former French military
attaché to China, Thailand and Vietnam,
said China’s East Sea
claim is invalid without convincing explanation.
Defying international law, China
has over past years sought to realize its groundless claim by infringing upon
sovereignty of the Philippines,
Vietnam and Malaysia.
The ‘nine-dash line’ claim is no longer just a matter
of particular concern of only one country in the region, but now is of utmost
concern to the international community. An international consensus should be
reached to ask China
to abolish its claim.
Professor Jerome Cohen from New York University’s
School of Law recommended that like the Philippines, Vietnam should sue China
into the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, because the nine-dash
line runs counter to the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
Vietnam can also
team up with the Philippines
or it can unilaterally sue China
in an international arbitration court in accordance with the 1982 UNCLOS, to
which China
is a signatory.
Professor Eric Franckx from Université Libre de
Bruxelles, Belgium,
said the 1982 UNCLOS is very important because it takes priority and governs
the settlement of sea disputes.
The convention was signed by many countries, including China that
agreed to settle sea disputes through the UNCLOS. This means Vietnam can unilaterally bring China in an
international court.
Professor Carlyle A. Thayer from the University of New South
Wales in Australia
suggested that Vietnam
submit a proposal to the UN Security Council, asking for a debate on China’s illegal oil rig placement in the East Sea
and its impact on regional security.
As a world power, China
may use its veto power to reject any UNSC resolution, but at least the
international community will better understand Vietnam’s
goodwill and China’s
actions, asking China to
withdraw its platform from Vietnam’s
waters.
Scholar even affirmed that it is unacceptable if any
party uses force to change the status quo, destabilize the region and violate
sovereignty of another nation, in its attempt to take control of the East Sea.
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