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《TAIPEI TIMES 焦點》 Xi threatened to start war over S China Sea: Duterte

2017/05/21 03:00

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte delivers a speech at the 33rd National Convention of the Philippine Coast Guard Auxiliary in Davao City, the Philippines, on Friday. Photo: AFP

/ Bloomberg

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said China threatened to go to war after he asserted the Southeast Asian nation’s sovereignty over disputed territory.

In an unspecified meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), Duterte said he would drill for oil in the South China Sea, citing an international arbitration tribunal ruling upholding the Philippines’ claim.

That prompted a retort from Xi, Duterte said.

“Well, if you force this, we’ll be forced to tell you the truth. We will go to war. We will fight you,” Duterte on Friday quoted Xi as saying.

Duterte did not say when and where the conversation took place.

Calls and an e-mail seeking comment from the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs outside of regular office hours were not immediately answered.

Since Duterte took office in June last year, the tough-talking 72-year-old leader had repaired fractured ties with China, touting the economic benefits including US$24 billion of loans and investment.

China’s efforts to assert its dominance over the South China Sea, where more than US$5 trillion in annual trade is ferried, have in the past angered Southeast Asian nations with competing claims, such as Vietnam and the Philippines.

The Philippines won a ruling by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, Netherlands, in last July last year that rejected China’s assertion to the territory.

China has said the tribunal has no jurisdiction over sovereignty disputes.

China’s claim is “far away,” Duterte said in the southern Philippine city of Davao, recalling what he told Xi.

“It’s almost alien to us to hear those words because we were never under Chinese jurisdiction,” he said.

Separately, officials from the two countries agreed to discuss “mutually acceptable approaches” to South China Sea issues during a bilateral consultation in the Chinese city of Guiyang on Friday, according to a joint statement released by the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs.

Handling incidents and disputes in an appropriate manner is important, they said.

The next discussion is to be held in the Philippines in the second half of the year.

新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES

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