VERA Files
SIX islands occupied by the Philippines in
the disputed Spratly Islands groups are covered by two
controversial joint seismic monitoring agreements among the
Philippines, China and Vietnam that have come under fire for
purportedly "sacrificing" Philippine interests in exchange for
huge loans from Beijing.
Based on coordinates provided in the annex to
both agreements, the agreement area includes Patag (Flat), Lawak
(Nanshan), Parola (Northeast Cay), Panata (Lankiam Cay), Kota (Loaita)
and Likas (West York) islands occupied by the Philippine
military.
The agreement also covers 24,000 square
kilometers of undisputed Philippine territory.
The area’s easternmost edge is around 25
kilometers from the southern tip of Palawan.
At its northern boundary, the area abuts the
Malampaya oil field and includes an area the Philippines had
long awarded to a British company for oil exploration.
Of the total 142,886 kilometers, around
24,000 square kilometers clearly belong to the Philippines and
fall outside the areas in the Spratlys which are claimed either
in whole or in part by the Philippines, China, Vietnam, Taiwan,
Indonesia and Brunei.
The area also swallows almost 80 percent of
the Kalayaan Group which is being claimed by the Philippines.
The Spratly island itself, which serves as
the island group’s main reference point, is at the westernmost
area covered by the agreement and about 700 kilometers from
Palawan.
The 142,886 square-kilometer study area also
covers Itu Aba, the largest island in the disputed group of
islands and the only one claimed and held by Taiwan, a
non-signatory to the 2004 agreement.
Known as Tai Ping Island to Taipei, Taiwan
President Chen Shui-bian inaugurated Feb. 3 a 1,150-meter-long
runway on the island, drawing protests from Philippine officials
who called the visit "unfortunate" and "lamentable."
Taiwan, one of the six claimants to the
oil-rich group of islands in the South China Sea, has not
officially reacted to the bilateral agreement between Beijing
and Manila, and the tripartite agreement the two countries
subsequently entered into with Hanoi since these deals recently
got into the limelight.
The Arroyo administration has come under fire
from allegations it received soft loans worth billions of
dollars extended by China, including the corruption-tainted
National Broadband Network project, after cutting the deals.
The Joint Marine Seismic Undertaking signed
on Sept. 1, 2004 between Philippine National Oil Co. and China
National Offshore in Beijing during the state visit of President
Arroyo was expanded six months later to include Petro Vietnam.
The Spratlys are being claimed wholly or in
part by the Philippines, China, Vietnam, Malaysia and Taiwan and
Brunei.
It has more or less 160 islands claimed
wholly both by China and Taiwan. Vietnam occupies 25 islands;
China, nine; the Philippines, eight; Malaysia, three, and
Taiwan, one. Brunei has established a fishing zone that overlaps
a southern reef.
Under the agreements, Sonca (Sand Cay) and
Nam Yit Islands, and Collins and Da Nu Thui (Petley) Reefs
claimed by Vietnam are covered by the pre-exploration study
area.
So are the reefs claimed by China: Landsowne
(Da Len Dao), Yong Shu Jian (Fiery Cross), Nan Xun Jiao (Gaven),
Kennan and Subi.
Sinh Cow, the main site of clashes between
Chinese and Vietnamese troops in the past, is also in the
agreement area.
UNDERCUT
Retired Commodore Rex Robles, who was part of
the team that prepared the 1960’s Handbook on the 53 islets in
the South China Sea being claimed by the Philippines, said in an
interview that a "militarily weak" Philippines initiated the
regime of cooperation among the six claimants to deter Chinese
aggression.
By entering into the bilateral agreement with
China, Robles said, the Philippines "undercut our own initiative
to talk to China as a group."
He added, "To add to the offense, we allowed
China to have access for study purposes to other islands without
permission by the other claimants."
Robles said the Philippines, by entering into
the agreement with China, has likewise taken Beijing’s side in
its sovereignty dispute with Taiwan.
The Philippines maintains a "One-China
Policy" and recognizes Beijing as representing the Chinese
people. But the Philippines maintains economic and cultural
relations with Taiwan, which hosts some 160,000 Filipino
workers.
SEISMIC STUDY
The Joint Marine Seismic Undertaking is a
three-year agreement for the Philippines, China and Vietnam to
undertake a seismic study "to gather and process data on
stratigraphy, tectonics and structural fabric of the subsurface
of the area."
The agreement states that China and the
Philippines had held "pre-exploration activity" with "a view of
engaging in a joint research of petroleum resource potential of
certain areas of the South China Sea."
Sources at the Department of Foreign Affairs
said the original agreement, which was pushed aggressively by
then Speaker Jose de Venecia, stipulated "exploration."
But then acting justice secretary and now
Ombudsman Merceditas Gutierrez objected, warning that it would
be unconstitutional.
The Constitution provides that "the
exploration, development, and utilization of natural resources
shall be under the full control and supervision of the State."
Gutierrez dropped her objection when at the
last minute, the word "exploration" was deleted and replaced
with "seismic study," DFA sources said.
LAST STAGE
Robles said a seismic study is done only when
the agencies involved have previously gathered data that
pinpointed where they would drill. "That means they are already
in the last stage of their undertaking," he said.
Opposition senators Panfilo Lacson, Antonio
Trillanes IV and Jamby Madrigal have sought an inquiry into the
agreements which, they said, is tantamount to treason.
Parañaque Rep. Roilo Golez has also called
for an investigation to make sure that the agreements do not
place national interest "in jeopardy."
Lacson and other opposition leaders cited
reports that the Spratlys deal was tied to the $8 billion
projects to be financed with loans from China, including North
Rail, South Rail, National Broadband Network and Cyber-Education
deals.
De Venecia has denied any connection between
the agreements and the release of Chinese loans to the
Philippines. He reiterated the deals were designed to turn "an
area of potential conflict into a zone of peace and
development."
Foreign Secretary Alberto Romulo, on the
other hand, has said the agreements with China and Vietnam are
not only consistent with the Philippine Constitution and the
2002 ASEAN-China Declaration on the Conduct of parties on the
South China Sea but also "manifest responsible diplomacy to ease
tension and promote confidence building in a region where, as
noted in the article, the issue of sovereignty of the Spratly
islands remains a potential ‘flashpoint.’"
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(VERA Files is the work of senior journalists taking a deeper
look at current issues. Vera is Latin for "true.")