China's 10-dash line called a 'fairy tale'
MANILA, Philippines - Former Interior Secretary Rafael Alunan III on Friday dismissed as “fiction” and a “fairy tale” China’s expansive territorial claim in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea).
Alunan said the law is on the side of the Philippines, which has been very vocal in criticizing China’s agressive actions in the region.
“We can engage China immediately in legal, diplomatic and information arenas because we hold a moral high ground. We have a law on our side. We have a history on our side,” Alunan told reporters on the sidelines of the Armed Forces of the Philippines Social Media Summit in Camp Aguinaldo.
“There’s nothing China is holding on to except the fiction that they own the South China Sea and nobody believes them,” he added.
China claims about 90 percent of the potentially oil and gas-rich West Philippine Sea through the so-called 10-dash line.
China’s wide-reaching territorial claim overlaps with that of the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan.
The Philippines has filed a case against China’s “exaggerated” claim before the international arbitral tribunal but Beijing refused to respond to it.
“Their (China) claim of the South China Sea is very fallacious there is no factual basis for it. I call it a fairytale,” Alunan said.
Alunan, a co-convenor of the West Philippine Sea Coalition, said several countries have been concerned and even upset by what he described as China’s “imperialistic” behavior.
“I attended recently the Shangrila dialogue in Singapore which is an annual conference of national security experts and we came away very very concerned and disappointed with the behavior of China,” Alunan said.
“Instead of using that forum to engage in preventive diplomacy, they were very very arrogant and were talking down to all the countries,” he added.
Alunan said the Philippines could win the case in the arbitral tribunal by default, noting that China has refused to participate in the proceedings.
Alunan said social networking sites can be used to mobilize Filipinos and to inspire patriotism.
He noted that the West Philippine Sea Coalition has used Facebook to organize rallies and conferences about territorial issues.
“All we can do in social media is to just keep on dishing out the truth, whatever legal issues surrounding the claim of China can be countered by us and we’ve done so,” Alunan said. – with a report from Irene Bongcales
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