Yahoo – AFP, Andrew Beatty, Nicholas Perry, September 8, 2016
![]() |
| US President Barack Obama speaks during the 4th ASEAN - US Summit in Vientiane on September 8, 2016 (AFP Photo/Saul Loeb) |
Vientiane
(AFP) - US President Barack Obama warned Beijing Thursday it could not ignore a
tribunal's ruling rejecting its sweeping claims to the South China Sea, driving
tensions higher in a territorial row that threatens regional security.
The dispute
has raised fears of military confrontation between the world's superpowers,
with China determined to cement control of the strategically vital waters
despite a July verdict that its claims have no legal basis.
"The
landmark arbitration ruling in July, which is binding, helped to clarify
maritime rights in the region," Obama told Southeast Asian leaders at a
summit in Laos.
"I
recognise this raises tensions but I also look forward to discussing how we can
constructively move forward together to lower tensions and promote diplomacy
and stability."
The verdict
by an international tribunal in The Hague said China's claims to most of the
waters -- through which $5 trillion in global shipping trade passes annually --
had no legal basis.
It also
said that a massive burst of artificial island-building activity undertaken by
China in recent years in a bid to bolster its claims was illegal.
China
angrily vowed to ignore the ruling, describing it as "waste paper",
even though it had legal force through the United Nations Convention on the Law
of the Sea.
![]() |
Disputed
claims in the South China Sea (AFP Photo/Adrian LEUNG,
Gal ROMA)
|
Obama's
emphasis on the ruling being legally "binding" attracted an immediate
reaction from China, which has argued the United States has no role to play in
the dispute.
"We
hope the US can take an objective and just attitude with respect to South China
Sea issues," Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in
Beijing.
Other claimants
in the sea are the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei -- all part of the
10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) bloc meeting in Laos
-- plus Taiwan.
Chinese
Premier Li Keqiang is also in Laos this week, with ASEAN hosting a series of
regional meetings, and gathered with Obama later Thursday at an 18-nation East
Asia summit.
'Serious
concern'
ASEAN
leaders released a statement on Wednesday saying they were "seriously
concerned" over recent developments in the sea.
But
intensive Chinese lobbying helped to ensure there was no mention of the July
ruling in the ASEAN statement.
The East
Asia statement to be released later Thursday was also going to give a muted
response, according to a draft obtained by AFP.
ASEAN works
by consensus, and China has successfully pressured Cambodia and Laos in recent
years to ensure the bloc does not gang together to heavily pressure Beijing.
However the
Philippines released photos on Wednesday it said showed renewed Chinese
island-building activity, in a deliberate move to throw the issue into the
spotlight.
The Chinese
ships were at Scarborough Shoal, a small fishing ground within the Philippines'
exclusive economic zone that China took control of in 2012.
If China
did build an island at the shoal, it could lead to a military outpost just 230
kilometres (140 miles) from the main Philippine island, where US forces are
stationed.
It would
also be a major step in China's quest to control the sea, giving it the ability
to enforce an air defence identification zone.
Obama
warned Chinese President Xi Jinping in March not to build at the shoal.
Show of
strength
Chinese
island-building in the Spratlys archipelago -- another strategically important
location -- has already triggered various US military shows of strength.
Security
analysts have said Chinese island-building at Scarborough Shoal could trigger a
military confrontation.
China
insisted repeatedly this week it was not undertaking any island-building
activities at the shoal, and on Thursday repeated its rejection of the tribunal
ruling.
A barrage
of other security threats were also in focus in Laos on Thursday, including
North Korea's nuclear ambitions following its latest missile tests.
Obama
warned on Monday that Kim Jong-Un's regime was dooming itself to further
isolation, and the UN Security Council condemned the tests.
Spectacular sideshow
A
spectacular sideshow in Laos this week has been a spat between Obama and the
acid-tongued Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, whose nations are longtime
allies.
Duterte
launched a tirade against Obama on Monday after being told the US president
planned to raise concerns about a war on crime in the Philippines that has
claimed 3,000 lives in just over two months.
"Son
of a whore, I will curse you in that forum," Duterte told reporters.
Obama
cancelled a meeting with Duterte scheduled for Tuesday because of the outburst,
and on Thursday urged the Philippine president to do his crime war "the
right way".
Obama tells ASEAN tribunal's ruling dismissing China's claims to South China Sea is binding https://t.co/ch5sVCKpsl pic.twitter.com/N3SUJRYuze— AFP news agency (@AFP) September 8, 2016




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.