China on high alert over Philippine 'patriotic' trip | Philippine Daily Inquirer
Tina G. Santos, Philippine Daily Inquirer, May 20, 2012
The planned “patriotic voyage” by former
Philippine Marine Capt. Nicanor Faeldon to the disputed Panatag Shoal
(Scarborough Shoal or Bajo de Masinloc) has prompted China to go on
“high alert” in the area.
“(We) will remain on high alert over the
island to prevent any provocative behavior,” China’s foreign ministry
spokesperson Hong Lei said in a news item posted Friday on the Chinese
government’s web portal.
Hong also said the “Philippine side” should stop such “irresponsible remarks and inciting radical behaviours.”
Faeldon earlier planned to hold a
“patriotic voyage” to the disputed shoal but was dissuaded from doing so
by President Aquino at the last minute on Friday.
Presidential deputy spokesperson Abigail
Valte said the President asked Faeldon to reconsider his plan because
“it might be construed in a negative way”.
The Philippine government has a policy of deescalation in the wake of the standoff with China over the shoal.
Hong reiterated that Huangyan Island—the name by which China refers to the disputed shoal—is “part of China’s territory”.
He also urged the Philippines to “come
back to the right track of a diplomatic solution” to the ongoing dispute
and “send clear and consistent messages” on the issue.
Sought for comment, Foreign Secretary
Albert del Rosario said: “As we had said, we are endeavoring to utilize
diplomatic consultations in the hope that we can diffuse the current
circumstance in Bajo de Masinloc.”
“We believe that a more durable solution,
however, would need to be a validation of our respective claims as
provided for by the dispute settlement mechanisms under the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea,” Del Rosario said in a text
message to the Inquirer.
On the other hand, Faeldon’s spokesperson, Kit Guerrero, said that China appeared to be “overreacting”.
“The voyage never took place because the
President asked Nick not to push through with it,” Guerrero said, adding
that Faeldon’s intention “was never to provoke or agitate, but to
support the country’s position in a peaceful and unarmed way”.
“Even if it pushed through, there was no
plan to raise our flag, but only to show our civilian presence there
which is our right as citizens within our Philippine territory,” he
said.
Meanwhile, the Filipino community in
Hawaii held a community forum at the Philippine Consulate last week to
discuss current Philippine maritime issues and concerns, more
specifically those related to the dispute over Bajo de Masinloc and the
waters within its vicinity.
“The consulate made it clear that the
purpose of the forum was not to incite or ignite anti-China sentiments
but rather to provide a more academic perspective of the current issues
between the Philippines and China,” the Department of Foreign Affairs
said in a statement.
The consulate also stressed that the
forum was a private initiative of the community and not of the
Philippine government, adding that many of those who attended expressed
much appreciation for the initiative.
Invited speakers included
Consul General Julius Torres, Dr. Serafin Colmenares Jr. of the Language
Access Program of the Office of the Governor, Dr. Fred Magdalena of the
University of Hawaii, and Dr. Belinda Aquino, retired professor also of
the University of Hawaii.
The participants included members of the Hawaii Filipino Lawyers Association, Fil-Am Youth Forum, the academe and the media.
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