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By: Agence France-Presse | Rocies Naguit, News5 | Anthony Deutsch, Reuters
December 1, 2015 8:13 AM

THE HAGUE, Netherlands -- (UPDATE - 8:39 a.m.) The Philippines has sought to debunk China's claims to disputed islands in the South China Sea, court officials said Monday as an international tribunal wrapped up a five-day hearing.

Although Beijing has refused to take part in the hearing before the Permanent Court of Arbitration, judges have now given China until January 1 to write a rebuttal to the case laid out by Manila in the Hague.

"We view China as a valued friend, and it is precisely to preserve that friendship that we initiated this arbitration," Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario said Monday in his concluding remarks to the court.

Del Rosario said the Philippines’ case rested on the belief that “international law is the great equalizer among states” and “allows small countries to stand on an equal footing with more powerful states.”

“Those who think ‘might makes right’ have it backwards. It is exactly the opposite, in that right makes might,” he said.

Del Rosario also lashed out at China’s actions, saying these were “not just interfering with the progress of the Filipino people” but “also trampling upon the rights and interests of the peoples of Southeast Asia and beyond.”

He stressed that “it is not just the fate of the Philippines that rests in your hands. I note the presence of the distinguished observers from Australia, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. I thank them for their presence. Other countries too are watching to see what this tribunal will do.”

“China’s island building not only undermines regional stability, but also the rule of law,” Del Rosario said. “It is moreover inflicting massive environmental damage on the most diverse marine environment in the world. China has intentionally created one of the biggest emerging environmental disasters in the world.”

“Yet, the stakes are still greater,” he pointed out, stressing that “no state, no matter how powerful, should be allowed to claim an entire sea as its own and to use force or the threat of force in asserting that claim. No state should be permitted to write and rewrite the rules in order to justify its expansionist agenda.

Del Rosario also said the Philippine case is a fulfillment of “one of its most solemn duties, which is to settle international disputes peacefully.”

Beijing claims sovereignty over almost the whole of the South China Sea on the basis of the so-called “nine-dash line” that first appeared on Chinese maps in the 1940s, pitting it against several neighbors.

But China is also a party to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

Manila has called for the tribunal, set up in 1899, to rule on the dispute, accusing Beijing of flouting the convention.

The Philippines argued "China's claims to sovereign rights jurisdiction, and to 'historic rights', with respect to the maritime areas of the South China Sea ... are contrary to the Convention," the court said in a statement issued late Monday.

The Philippines also believes China has failed "in its duty to prevent its nationals from exploiting resources over which the Philippines has sovereign rights and has failed to respect traditional fishing rights at Scarborough Shoal," the statement said.

Beijing had also failed to protect the marine environment by using destructive fishing methods such as cyanide and explosives, while its ships were proving a hazard in the sea.

Even after Manila launched the court proceedings, Beijing had exacerbated the tensions by "building artificial islands at nearly all of the maritime features presently under its control," Philippine officials told the court.

The hearing was held behind closed doors.

Beijing has never precisely defined its claims to the strategic South China Sea, through which about a third of the world's traded oil passes.

The waters have become the stage for a tussle for dominance between Beijing and Washington, the world's two largest economic and military powers.

Following a stand-off between Chinese ships and the weak Philippine Navy in 2012, China took control of the rich fishing ground called Scarborough Shoal that is within the Philippines' claimed exclusive economic zone.

The court is now due to hand down a decision sometime in 2016, even though Chinese officials did not attend.

It noted that Beijing's consistent position was that it "has indisputable sovereignty over the South China Sea Islands and the adjacent waters."

"We have been able to present all of our arguments ... to support the main thrust of our case that the nine-dash line has no basis in international law," said the Philippines' deputy presidential spokeswoman Abigail Valte.

"We have a good case and we are hoping that after this round we will be able to secure a decision from the tribunal in about six months' time," she told Reuters.

China's assertiveness in the South China Sea has raised tensions with its neighbors and with the United States, which is a dominant security partner and objects to Beijing's claims.

China's Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that it would not accept any decision imposed on China with regards to its maritime sovereignty and territorial rights.

"The Philippines unilaterally raising and insisting on promoting the South China Sea arbitration is a political provocation in the guise of law," said ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying.

The arbitration court's rulings are supposed to be binding on its member countries, which include China. But the tribunal has no powers of enforcement and its verdicts have sometimes been ignored.

"It's not about the territory itself, but really for standing up for what is right in the proper forum," Valte said. The Philippines cannot go up against a giant military power like China, but "it is important for us to have something legal in terms of a resolution".

The court has yet to set a date for a ruling.

THE FULL TEXT OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS SEC. DEL ROSARIO'S CONCLUDING STATEMENT:

Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Tribunal, good afternoon. Before our Agent, the Honorable Solicitor General, presents our final submissions, it is my honor to respectfully address you one last time in this Great Hall of Justice.

When I first had the privilege of appearing before you in July, it was at the beginning of the hearings on jurisdiction. We did not know then whether or not we would ever reach this point. The Philippines, however, never doubted this Tribunal’s jurisdiction.

But there are some who could not believe that the Arbitral Tribunal would have the courage to apply the law to a country like China.

There are those who think the rule of law in international relations does not apply to Great Powers. We reject that view. International law is the great equalizer among States. It allows small countries to stand on an equal footing with more powerful States. Those who think “might makes right” have it backwards. It is exactly the opposite, in that right makes might.

That is why, in January 2013, we confidently put our fate in the hands of this Tribunal and the compulsory dispute resolution mechanisms of UNCLOS. With your wise guidance, we have come a long way.

Mr. President, Distinguished Members of the Tribunal, the 29 October Award on Jurisdiction is a remarkable document. It will not only stand the test of time, it will be a model for ages. It is remarkable in many ways, most especially for its moral strength. It is a compelling rebuke to those who doubt that international justice does exists and will prevail.

I say this not just as the Secretary of Foreign Affairs of the Philippines, but also as a global citizen. It is not just the fate of the Philippines that rests in your hands. I note the presence of the distinguished observers from Australia, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Viet Nam. I thank them for their presence. Other countries too are watching to see what this Tribunal will do.

It is fitting that these hearings are ending as 2015 itself draws to a close. This year, marks the 70th anniversary of the United Nations.

That great institution is an expression of the best in us. It is unfortunate that it took one of the saddest episodes in human history to create it. Yet, those of us who lived through that episode also remember the hopes for a new chapter in our common history. We dared to envision a future of enduring peace, shared prosperity and a new era of collaboration.

Two centerpieces of that new order were the sovereign equality of all States, and the commitment to settle disputes peacefully. The sovereign equality of States is enshrined in the first substantive provision of the UN Charter, Article 2(1). The obligation to settle disputes by peaceful means appears subsequently in Article 2(3).

Mechanisms for the compulsory settlement of disputes were also a critical part of this new order.

Article 33(1) specifically mentions arbitration and judicial settlement. And, of course, the Charter also gave birth to the International Court of Justice.

I am proud to say that the Philippines was among the original 51 signatories of the UN Charter. This was true for China as well.

When we started this arbitration, the Philippines was fulfilling one of its most solemn duties, which is to settle international disputes peacefully. The Tribunal knows that our disputes with China in the South China Sea have, for a long time, complicated our relationship. Most recently, tensions have risen dramatically. Unable to resolve these disputes ourselves, we thus turned to this arbitration to provide all parties a durable, rules-based solution.

China has said that it considers the initiation of this arbitration to be “an unfriendly act.” We disagree. In 1982, the UN General Assembly adopted the Manila Declaration on the Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes Between States which declared that recourse to the judicial settlement of disputes “should not be considered an unfriendly act between States.”

This year is also the 40th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the Philippines and the People’s Republic of China. Since 1975, economic and political ties between our two countries have continuously grown. We view China as a valued friend. And it is precisely to preserve that friendship that we initiated this arbitration.

We believe this arbitration benefits everyone. For China, it will define and clarify its maritime entitlements.

For the Philippines it will clarify what is ours, specifically our fishing rights, rights to resources and rights to enforce our laws within our EEZ. And for the rest of the international community, it will help ensure peace, security, stability and freedom of navigation and overflight in the South China Sea.

We also believe that this arbitration will be instructive for other States to consider the dispute settlement mechanisms under UNCLOS as an option for resolving disputes in a peaceful manner.

Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Tribunal, the Philippines more than anyone is mindful of the fact that your October Award on Jurisdiction was not the end of the story. Several jurisdictional questions were joined to these hearings on the merits.

We trust that last week and again today, our counsel have resolved any lingering jurisdictional concerns you may have. In our view, the Tribunal’s jurisdiction could not be clearer with respect to declaring that China’s claim to “historic rights” in the areas encompassed by the nine-dash line is inconsistent with UNCLOS. Mr. Reichler showed last Tuesday that the historic rights that China claims are very different from a claim to “historic title” that might be precluded from jurisdiction under Article 298.

On the substance of the matter, Professor Oxman and Mr. Loewenstein showed that the regimes of the continental shelf and exclusive economic zone under UNCLOS, and even general international law, plainly exclude China’s claim of “historic rights” within the nine-dash line.

Mr. President, I am not a lawyer. But in my mind, when the Convention says that the Philippines’ rights in its continental shelf exist ipso facto and ab initio, and do not depend on occupation, that means there is no room for China’s claim. And when the Convention speaks of an “exclusive” economic zone, I take exclusive to mean exclusive. That means it is ours, and what is ours is ours, not China’s.

On Wednesday morning, Professor Sands showed why we so desperately need your guidance. With an assertiveness that is growing with every passing day, China is preventing us from carrying out even the most basic exploration and exploitation activities in areas where only the Philippines can possibly have rights.

The preamble to the UN Charter states (and I quote)

“WE THE PEOPLES OF THE UNITED NATIONS DETERMINED … “to establish conditions under which justice and respect for the obligations arising from treaties and other sources of international law can be maintained, and “to promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom,”(end of quote)

China is failing on both counts. It is failing to respect the obligations arising from treaties, specifically UNCLOS. It is also interfering with the Philippines’ sovereign duty to promote the social progress of our people, and our efforts to achieve a better standard of life for all Filipinos.

China is not just interfering with the progress of the Filipino people. China’s unilateral actions, and the atmosphere of intimidation they have created, are also trampling upon the rights and interests of the peoples of Southeast Asia and beyond.

China’s massive island building campaign shows its utter disregard for the rights of other States, and for international law. China started this a year after the Philippines initiated the arbitration. It is intent on changing unilaterally the status quo in the region, imposing China’s illegal nine-dash line claim by fiat and presenting this Tribunal with a fait accompli.

China’s island building not only undermines regional stability, but also the rule of law. It is moreover inflicting massive environmental damage on the most diverse marine environment in the world.

China has intentionally created one of the biggest emerging environmental disasters in the world.

Yet, the stakes are still greater. The Convention’s “Constitution for the Oceans” is itself at risk. No State, no matter how powerful, should be allowed to claim an entire sea as its own and to use force or the threat of force in asserting that claim. No State should be permitted to write and re-write the rules in order to justify its expansionist agenda. If that is allowed, the Convention itself would be deemed useless. Power will have prevailed over reason, and the rule of law would have been rendered meaningless.

We trust that our counsel have made it equally clear that there is no issue of overlapping entitlements beyond 12 M in the South China Sea.

Mr. Reichler and Professor Schofield showed that there is no feature in the Spratly Islands that can sustain human habitation or an economic life of its own. There is therefore no feature that can generate an EEZ or continental shelf. Mr. Reichler called Itu Aba a “Potemkin Island.”

Since there are no overlapping entitlements beyond 12 M, the Tribunal is free to rule that China’s actions at Mischief Reef, at Second Thomas Shoal and elsewhere violate the Philippines sovereign rights and jurisdiction.

Last Thursday, Professor Oxman made clear what the practical consequences of deciding that even a single feature in the Spratly Islands generates entitlement beyond 12 M would be. China regards its entitlements in the South China Sea as excluding those of the Philippines and of Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei as well.

It has no regard for the entitlements of other States. China is also more than willing to use force and the threat of force to enforce its perceived entitlements, even where it has none.

If the Tribunal found that China has a potential entitlement to 200 M on the basis of a speck of broken coral and sand in the middle of the South China Sea, it would hand China the “golden key” that Mr. Martin referred to last Wednesday. The Filipino people would only be able to benefit from the natural resources of our EEZ and continental shelf on China’s terms, if at all. In the real world, that would mean not at all.

It would also perpetuate in another form, the same disputes, the same danger and the same instability that China currently exploits without restraint.

And this time it would be much worse: the possibility of a just solution obtained through arbitration will have been exhausted. We will have no other legal avenue of confronting China’s unlawful conduct.

Mr. Martin and Professor Oxman showed that the very purpose of Article 121(3) is to prevent such perverse results by denying tiny islands expanded maritime zones. The need for clear and definitive legal constraint is obvious. And it is to you, Mr. President, Members of the Tribunal, to whom we confidently entrust the task of providing the necessary constraint.

Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Tribunal, if I may say so, there is no greater contribution to international peace and security the Tribunal could make than to decide that none of the features in the Spratly Islands is capable of generating any entitlement beyond 12 M.

The unjustifiable encroachment on the sovereign rights of other States, as well as the global commons, would be avoided. The importance of the sovereignty disputes over these tiny bits of land would be reduced in importance. They would cease to be a casus belli. And the inexcusable harm to the environment resulting from efforts to solidify expansionist maritime claims would be diminished.

Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Tribunal, we recognize that the Tribunal’s mission is judicial. The Tribunal must decide the claims on the basis of the facts and the law, in this case UNCLOS. We submit that on that basis alone, the Tribunal must sustain all of the Philippines’ claims, especially in regard to the maritime entitlements of the Parties, and the exclusive sovereign rights and jurisdiction of the Philippines within 200 M of its coasts, except for the 12 M territorial seas around the disputed insular features.

That said, your mandate to achieve justice is not carried out in a vacuum. Judges and arbitrators are not expected to be oblivious to the realities on the ground. UNCLOS is the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. The object and purpose of the Charter, as well as those of the Convention, are far from irrelevant. These purposes include the maintenance and strengthening of international peace and security. Nothing would contribute more to these objectives than the Tribunal’s finding that China’s rights and obligations are neither more nor less than those established by UNCLOS. And that the entitlements of the tiny insular features it claims are limited to 12 M.

Finding otherwise would gravely undermine these same objectives. It would leave the Philippines, and its ASEAN neighbors, in worse straits than when we embarked on this arbitral voyage.

It would convert the nine-dash line, or its equivalent in the form of exaggerated maritime zones for tiny, uninhabitable features, into a Berlin Wall of the Sea. A giant fence, owned by, and excluding everyone but, China itself.

We are confident that you will interpret and apply the law in a way that produces a truly just solution. That is the best way -- indeed, the only way -- to craft a legal solution that truly promotes peace, security and good neighborliness in the South China Sea.

Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Tribunal, all that remains for me to do is to say thank you. First, I wish to thank our counsel. The Philippines could not have entrusted this case, our fate, to more skilled, principled and determined hands.

I know they share the Philippines’ firm conviction about the need to uphold the international rule of law as the bedrock of peace, order and stability in our world.

Second, I wish to thank the extraordinarily able personnel of the Permanent Court of Arbitration who have provided all of us with the diligent assistance that has made these proceedings run so smoothly. We know none of this would have been possible without them.

And finally, Mr. President, distinguished Members of the Tribunal, on behalf of myself, on behalf of our President, Benigno S. Aquino III, and on behalf of all the Filipino people, I wish to humbly thank each of you for the care, dedication, wisdom and courage with which you have conducted these proceedings.

We confidently entrust our fate, the fate of the region and, indeed, the fate of the Convention to you. We know that in your capable hands, the rule of law will not be reduced to the quaint aspiration of a time now past, but rather will be accorded the primacy that the founders of the United Nations and the drafters of UNCLOS envisioned.

Mr. President, Distinguished Members of the Tribunal, you have our deepest gratitude. May I ask that you kindly invite the Honorable Solicitor General to the lectern to present the final Submissions of the Philippines.

China given until Jan 1 to rebut PH case despite Beijing snub of arbitration
 
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1. Someone can argue that China is too late to the party, that's why other claimant control more islands and reefs (well, fxck them).
2. Someone can also argue that others who fail to secure their own island or protect their so called territory because their military don't have the capability to do that and their leaders fail in diplomatic relationship with others.
3. Some called other thief while stole an island from their so called new friend previously:pop:
4. The whole region fail to unite to counter so called aggressive country because they can't even develop their country in healthy way, although they can try to learn mistake from other developing countries.
5. Some country for some reasons have very weak military and suffer a lot from previous wars, still want more war because they unable to use their diplomatic power to negotiate.
 
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1. Someone can argue that China is too late to the party, that's why other claimant control more islands and reefs (well, fxck them).
2. Someone can also argue that others who fail to secure their own island or protect their so called territory because their military don't have the capability to do that and their leaders fail in diplomatic relationship with others.
3. Some called other thief while stole an island from their so called new friend previously:pop:
4. The whole region fail to unite to counter so called aggressive country because they can't even develop their country in healthy way, although they can try to learn mistake from other developing countries.
5. Some country for some reasons have very weak military and suffer a lot from previous wars, still want more war because they unable to use their diplomatic power to negotiate.

why doesn't given Malaysia, your island to China ?
 
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:coffee: If you say your island is belong to others, you already loss in the first round.
Malaysia gov might disagree with nine dash line (from time to time, local gov officers might talk shxt), but it doesn't mean we can't develop healthy relationship with China (and others in the region).
If we can't solve the issue now, better to agree to disagree, find a middle ground. Let's the future generation to solve it because they will be more intelligent than current gens.
why doesn't given Malaysia, your island to China ?
 
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