China's
action condemned as "provocative", "illegal"
02:28
Analyst
Carl Thayer Carl Thayer , an Emeritus Professor at the University of New
South Wales has called latest China's action in the East Sea (internationally
known as South China Sea) "provocative," "illegal" and
has no basis under international law.
The Fiery Cross Reef in the Spratly archipelago is
illegally developed by China into an artificial island. (Photo: Getty)
"International
law does not recognize sovereignty acquired through conquest," Thayer
said by e-mail.
Beijing's
move also violates the Declaration on Conduct of Parties in the South China
Sea (DOC) that was agreed to by China and ASEAN members in 2002.
Thayer
pointed out Paragraph 5 of the DOC, which states that "The Parties undertake
to exercise self-restraint in the conduct of activities that would complicate
or escalate disputes and affect peace and stability" in the South China
Sea.
"China’s
unilateral action seriously complicates the dispute and affects peace and
stability in the South China Sea," Thayer said. "Chinese
administrators will issue regulations and directives that seriously affect
the sovereignty and sovereign jurisdiction of both Vietnam and the
Philippines," he noted.
Meanwhile,
former Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert Del Rosario on April 19 urged the
Philippine government to protest China's establishment of two districts aimed
at exerting control over the East Sea, where the Philippines and other Asian
nations have overlapping claims.
"We
therefore respectfully urge our government to protest this recent action of
China, as it rightly did over the sinking of the Vietnamese fishing boat on
April 8, 2020," Del Rosario said in a statement.
He
also accused China of exploiting the new coronavirus pandemic to advance its
"illegal" claims in the waters.
"These
recent events in the South China Sea remind us Filipinos to be eternally
vigilant in the defense of our country’s territory and sovereign rights even
as we confront a very grave threat as COVID-19," he said.
"These
show that China has been relentless in exploiting the COCID-19 pandemic as it
continues to pursue its illegal and expansive claims in the South China Sea
to the prejudice of Filipinos, the ASEAN States and the international
community as a whole," Del Rosario said.
He
also warned that China’s declaration of a new administrative district in the
Spratlys "is a pre-emptive move to push aside sovereignty claims by Vietnam
and the Philippines."
The
South China Morning Post earlier reported that the two new districts will be
under the authority of the local government in Sansha, a city in the southern
island of Hainan.
These
new districts, the report added, "will govern the Paracels and
Macclesfield Bank—an area claimed by Vietnam and Taiwan—as well as the
Spratly Islands and their adjacent waters, where there are multiple
overlapping claims."
In
response to China’s move, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Le Thi Thu Hang said
on April 19 voiced Vietnam’s strong objection to China’s establishment of the
so-called “Sansha city” and related acts as they seriously violated Vietnam’s
sovereignty.
“Vietnam
has strongly affirmed many times that it has sufficient historical evidence and
legal foundation to assert its sovereignty over the Hoang Sa and Truong Sa
archipelagos,” the official said.
She
emphasized that those moves of China are null and void, unrecognized, and
they give no benefits to the friendship among nations and further complicate
the situation in the East Sea, the region and the world.
“Vietnam
demands that China respect Vietnam’s sovereignty, abrogate its wrongful
decisions regarding the moves and not to take similar acts in the future,”
Hang added.
GMA
News/VOV
|
Thứ Hai, 20 tháng 4, 2020
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