China has been reclaiming more land to bolster its
military presence in the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China
Sea, where its increasing assertion of its territorial claims has
brought it into standoffs with its neighbors, Philippine officials said
Thursday.
The Philippines protested in April after discovering
that Chinese dredging ships had reclaimed a large patch of land in
Johnson Reef in the Spratlys that it could use to build a military
outpost or an airstrip far from the Chinese mainland.
President
Benigno Aquino III said he was bothered after seeing surveillance photos
of ships capable of reclaiming land in the vicinity of two other
Chinese-occupied reefs in the Spratlys called Cuarteron and Gaven.
"We
are again bothered that there seems to be development in other areas
within the disputed seas," Aquino said at a news conference.
When
asked whether reclamation of land was underway in the two
Chinese-controlled reefs, Aquino did not give a clear reply, but two
military officials told The Associated Press that government
surveillance had monitored land reclamation activities in Cuarteron and
Gaven.
The Chinese Embassy in Manila did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
China,
the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam have overlapping
territorial claims in the Spratlys, a group of mostly barren islands,
reefs and atolls that are believed to be sitting atop oil and natural
gas deposits. They also straddle the world's most-traversed sea lanes.
Taiwan,
Vietnam and the Philippines occupied separate islands in the
archipelago decades ago. China later stepped up efforts to take control
of uninhabited submerged reefs by reclaiming land and constructing
buildings on them that resembled military outposts.
China's spats
with Vietnam and the Philippines in the South China Sea have
particularly flared, with the most serious confrontation erupting when
Beijing deployed an oil rig on May 1 in waters that Hanoi claims are
within its exclusive economic zone. That zone refers to the 230-mile
(370-kilometer) stretch of sea in which a coastal country has an
exclusive right to fish and exploit undersea gas and oil deposits under
the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea.
China's oil rig
deployment ignited violent protests in Vietnam that killed at least two
Chinese. Chinese and Vietnamese ships continue to be locked in a tense
standoff around the oil rig.
Chinese government ships have also
been in a standoff since May 2013 with a small contingent of Filipino
marines stationed on a grounded Philippine navy ship at the Second
Thomas Shoal in the Spratlys. The Chinese ships have repeatedly
attempted to block Philippine ships delivering fresh batches of marines
and food supply to the shoal, sparking tense chases.
Southeast
Asian countries have failed so far to convince China to negotiate a
legally-binding code of conduct aimed at discouraging actions that could
escalate to fighting in the disputed waters.
Foreign Secretary
Albert del Rosario said that until China's "expansion agenda is
completed, I don't see a desire on their part to conclude the code of
conduct."
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