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New deal establishes a hotline Chinese and Philippine presidents can use to stop clashes at sea

Philippines China Territorial Disputes
July 16, 2024
JIM GOMEZ - AP

MANILA, Philippines (AP) โ€” A recently signed agreement will open a direct line of communication between the presidential offices of China and the Philippines to help prevent any new confrontation from spiraling out of control in the disputed South China Sea, according to highlights of the accord seen by The Associated Press on Tuesday.

China and the Philippines have created such emergency telephone hotlines at lower levels in the past to better manage disputes, particularly in two fiercely disputed shoals where the Philippines has accused Chinese forces of increasingly hostile actions and China says Philippine ships have encroached despite repeated warnings.

The territorial disputes, however, have persisted since last year, sparking fears of a larger armed conflict that could involve the United States, which has repeatedly warned that itโ€™s obligated to defend the Philippines, a key Asian treaty ally, if Filipino forces come under attack in the disputed waters.

New deal establishes a hotline Chinese and Philippine presidents can use to stop clashes at sea
Philippines China Territorial Disputes

U.S. Gen. Charles Brown Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met Philippine military chief Gen. Romeo Brawner in Manila on Tuesday and discussed ways to further boost defense ties, enhance the militaries' ability to operate jointly and ensure regional ability, the Philippine military said.

During a confrontation between Chinese and Philippine forces at the Philippines-occupied Second Thomas Shoal in August 2023, the Philippine government said it was unable to reach Chinese officials through an established โ€œmaritime communication mechanismโ€ for several hours. That emergency telephone hotline was arranged after Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing in January 2023.

Chinese and Philippine officials dealing with the territorial disputes held talks in Manila on July 2, following a violent confrontation at the Second Thomas Shoal in which Chinese coast guard personnel reportedly wielded knives, an axe and improvised spears and Philippine navy personnel were injured. The Chinese forces also seized seven Philippine navy rifles, said Brawner, who demanded China return the firearms and pay for damages.

Both sides โ€œrecognized the need to strengthen the bilateral maritime communication mechanism on the South China Seaโ€ and signed an arrangement โ€œon improving Philippines-China maritime communication mechanisms,โ€ the Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila said in a statement after the talks in Manila, but did not provide a copy or details of the agreement.

New deal establishes a hotline Chinese and Philippine presidents can use to stop clashes at sea
Philippines China Territorial Disputes

A copy of the agreement's highlights, seen by the AP, said it โ€œprovides several channels for communication between the Philippines and China, specifically on maritime issues, through the representatives to be designated by their leaders."

The hotline talks could also be done โ€œthrough the Department of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Foreign Affairs counterparts, including at the foreign minister and vice foreign minister levels or through their designated representatives,โ€ it said, and added without elaborating that Philippine officials were โ€œin discussions with the Chinese side on the guidelines that will govern the implementation of this arrangement."

There was also a plan to set up a new communication channel between the Chinese and Philippine coast guards โ€œonce the corresponding memorandum of understandingโ€ between them is concluded, according to the agreement.

During the talks in Manila, China and the Philippines agreed on two other confidence-boosting steps to intensify โ€œcooperation between their respective coast guard authoritiesโ€ and the possible convening of a maritime forum between Chinese and Philippine scientists and academic leaders.

โ€œBoth sides recognized that there is a need to restore trust, rebuild confidence and create conditions conducive to productive dialogue and interaction,โ€ the Philippine department of foreign affairs statement said. It added that China and the Philippines โ€œaffirmed their commitment to de-escalate tensions without prejudice to their respective positions.โ€

It said that โ€œthere was substantial progress on developing measures to manage the situation at sea,โ€ but acknowledged that โ€œsignificant differences remain."

___

Find more of the AP's coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/south-china-sea

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