Defending Philippine Sovereign Rights in the West Philippine Sea
Resumen
TLDRThe video explores the significance of the South China Sea, both strategically and economically. It begins by describing the region as a critical international waterway crucial for global trade, with approximately $5.3 trillion worth of goods passing through annually. It highlights the rich natural resources within the South China Sea, specifically focused on its fisheries and potentially vast reserves of methane hydrates. The video delves into the geopolitical tensions surrounding sovereign claims, primarily between China and the Philippines. China's assertion of its historical claim over the South China Sea is dissected, portraying it as based on historical navigations and the nine-dash line map, which was submitted to the United Nations in 2009. The Hague Tribunal's rejection of these claims in 2016 is emphasized, stating that the nine-dash line has no legal grounding for sovereign territory within the South China Sea. The video also details the strategic significance of various islands, particularly the Spratly Islands and Scarborough Shoal, and their roles in maritime disputes. Moreover, it outlines China's techniques for asserting control, including military installations and historical claims. The response of other nations, notably the USA, in conducting freedom of navigation operations (FONOPS) is explained as part of maintaining international maritime law. Additionally, historical treaties relevant to the territorial disputes, including the Treaty of Paris and the Treaty of Washington, are discussed to clarify the legal standing of the Philippines in these territorial issues. The presentation emphasizes the need for peaceful, law-based resolution and cooperation among Southeast Asian nations to counter China's expansive claims.
Para llevar
- 🌊 The South China Sea is a crucial international waterway impacting global trade.
- ⚓ Over $5.3 trillion in goods pass through annually influencing major economies.
- 🐟 It is rich in fisheries, accounting for 12% of the world's fish catch.
- 🌌 Methane hydrates in the sea may power economies for centuries.
- 🇨🇳 China bases its claims on historical maps and narratives.
- 📜 The Hague ruling states the nine-dash line lacks legal basis.
- 🌍 Freedom of navigation is a key issue for the US and EU.
- 🏝️ The Spratly Islands are central to territorial disputes.
- 🛰️ Strategic installations increase tension in the region.
- 🤝 ASEAN nations are crucial in peaceful dispute resolutions.
Cronología
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The South China Sea is a vital international waterway with significant trade passing through it annually. It supports major exporting countries like China, Japan, Taiwan, and is crucial for oil imports to Asia. The sea is rich in fisheries and natural gas resources such as methane hydrates, which China is exploring.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Sovereign rights in the South China Sea are contested due to territorial claims over tiny rocks and islands, which can extend a nation's territorial sea. The Hague Tribunal's decision emphasized territorial baselines and historical claims, notably China's historical narrative of ownership for 2,000 years, which was disputed.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
China's Nine-Dash Line claim, submitted in 2009, asserts control over most of the South China Sea. This has led to disputes as other nations like Vietnam and Indonesia have formally protested these claims. In 1946, China forcibly took control of key maritime features following Japan's defeat.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
China's expansion in the South China Sea accelerated post-World War II, claiming islands like Itu Aba and building military bases on reefs. This assertive stance has caused friction with Southeast Asian nations. The international community remains concerned due to implications for free navigation.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
China's provocative stance culminates in its Nine-Dash Line map, treating vast maritime areas as national territory, contrary to international norms. This aggressive posture challenges regional order and has prompted nations to contest China's historical narrative, which is viewed as inaccurate.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
Prior to the Tribunal ruling, China's historical claims lacked substantial evidence. Historically, China’s southernmost extent was Hainan, not including contested features. China's aggressive seizures, such as the Spratlys and Scarborough Shoal, were timed during periods of regional unrest and vulnerability.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
The Tribunal's ruling refuted China's historical claims, affirming that the Spratlys cannot sustain human habitation independently, hence lack an exclusive economic zone. This legitimized the Philippines' maritime entitlements, undermining China's territorial assertions under its Nine-Dash Line.
- 00:35:00 - 00:40:00
The ruling highlighted that Scarborough Shoal lacks human habitation viability, thus cannot support an exclusive economic zone. China’s broad claims, including Reed Bank, have no legal standing beyond set maritime limits, reinforcing the Philippines’ sovereign rights under international law.
- 00:40:00 - 00:45:00
Despite skepticism about enforcement, the Tribunal's decision is clear: China's Nine-Dash Line has no legal basis in international maritime law. The ruling aligns with global maritime norms, limiting any state's claims beyond the allowable distance from their coastline.
- 00:45:00 - 00:50:00
The narrative of China’s historical maritime rights was challenged by ancient maps and evidence, proving China's territorial delineations ended at Hainan Island. This deconstruction of China’s historical narrative emphasizes a false premise which has influenced public perception.
- 00:50:00 - 00:55:00
The 1900 Treaty of Washington clarified U.S. possession of islands beyond treaty lines, shaping Philippine claims. The boundaries were informed by historical maps like Murillo Velarde's, which are essential for understanding territorial entitlements established during colonial rule.
- 00:55:00 - 01:00:00
Legal assertions were supported by evidence that Spratlys and Scarborough Shoal historically belonged to the Philippines, as illustrated in maps like the 1734 Murillo Velarde. These claims were stronger than China’s, underpinning the Tribunal's ruling on Philippine maritime rights.
- 01:00:00 - 01:05:00
After the Tribunal ruling, the South China Sea's status as a global commons was reinforced with areas designated as international waters, allowing free navigation. This aligns with global interests to keep these sea lanes open and is a counter to China’s territorial imperatives.
- 01:05:00 - 01:10:00
Global reactions to the Tribunal's ruling included military assertions by the U.S., France, and others, exercising the right to navigate freely under international law, which undermines China's maritime claims. These actions support the Philippines' legal position.
- 01:10:00 - 01:15:00
International naval operations, including from the U.S., France, and other nations, assert navigational rights, subtly reinforcing The Hague ruling. The global support highlights the importance of rule-based international systems amidst China's expansive maritime claims.
- 01:15:00 - 01:22:34
The Philippines, encouraged by the global maritime community, should continue to assert its rights through legal channels. By reinforcing international law and engaging regional partners, it can push back against China's disputed claims, maintaining peace and territorial integrity.
Mapa mental
Preguntas frecuentes
Why is the South China Sea important?
The South China Sea is a major international waterway, handling over 5.3 trillion USD in ship-borne trade annually, and is rich in fisheries and natural resources like methane hydrates.
What are methane hydrates?
Methane hydrates are lumps of minerals on the seabed containing natural gas encapsulated in ice crystals, which are more abundant than oil and gas combined.
What is China's historical claim to the South China Sea?
China claims historical rights to the South China Sea, arguing it has been within their territory for over 2000 years, based on ancient navigation and naming.
What is the significance of Scarborough Shoal?
Scarborough Shoal is strategically important due to its location and the territorial sea it grants, impacting control over fisheries and potential mineral resources.
What was the outcome of the Hague Tribunal ruling?
The Hague Tribunal ruled that China's claims to historic rights in the South China Sea under the nine-dash line have no legal basis.
How does the South China Sea impact global trade?
About $5.3 trillion of ship-borne trade passes through annually, making it vital for countries like China, Japan, and South Korea.
What techniques has China employed to assert its claims?
China has used historical narratives, submission of maps to international bodies, and military presence to assert claims.
What are the Spratly Islands?
The Spratly Islands are a group of islands with rich fishing grounds, also believed to be rich in oil and gas reserves.
How has the USA responded to China's claims?
The USA conducts freedom of navigation operations (FONOPS) in the South China Sea to challenge China's maritime claims.
What is the significance of the Treaty of Washington 1900 in these territorial claims?
The Treaty of Washington 1900 clarified that any islands belonging to the Philippine archipelago, even outside the original treaty lines, were ceded to the USA by Spain.
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- 00:00:06a pleasant day to everyone
- 00:00:08thank you for watching this presentation
- 00:00:11on philippine sovereign rights in the
- 00:00:13west philippine sea
- 00:00:14if you look at the screen you will see
- 00:00:16the south china sea
- 00:00:18why is the south china sea important
- 00:00:21today the south china sea is one of the
- 00:00:23most important
- 00:00:24international waterways in the world
- 00:00:27about
- 00:00:285.3 trillion u.s dollars in ship born
- 00:00:31goods
- 00:00:32diverse the south china sea every year
- 00:00:35four leading exporting countries
- 00:00:37use the south china sea for their
- 00:00:39maritime trade
- 00:00:40you have china you have japan south
- 00:00:43korea
- 00:00:44and taiwan about 65 percent of the
- 00:00:47petroleum imports of south korea
- 00:00:5060 of the petroleum imports of japan and
- 00:00:53taiwan passed through
- 00:00:55the narrow strait of malacca on the way
- 00:00:58to these countries
- 00:00:59and today 50 percent of the petroleum
- 00:01:02imports of china
- 00:01:04pass through the narrow state of malacca
- 00:01:06going to
- 00:01:07china but before 2015
- 00:01:11eighty percent of the petroleum imports
- 00:01:13of china passed through
- 00:01:14the narrow strait of malacca and china
- 00:01:17was always worried that
- 00:01:19someone might block this narrow strait
- 00:01:22and the chinese economy will grind to a
- 00:01:26halt
- 00:01:26so china built two pipelines
- 00:01:29one for oil and other for gas from the
- 00:01:32coast of myanmar
- 00:01:33to kunin in yunnan province and these
- 00:01:36pipelines
- 00:01:38started operating in 2015. so today
- 00:01:4130 percent of the petroleum imports of
- 00:01:43china pass through these two pipelines
- 00:01:46and only 50 percent pass through the
- 00:01:49nano strait of balaka
- 00:01:51about 12 of the total annual
- 00:01:54fish catch of the world comes from the
- 00:01:58south china sea the south china sea
- 00:02:00is very rich in fishery it's a very
- 00:02:02small sea it con
- 00:02:04it comprises only about 2.5 percent of
- 00:02:07the ocean surface of the world
- 00:02:09but it accounts for 12 percent of the
- 00:02:11annual fish catch
- 00:02:12because of the spratlys the spratlys are
- 00:02:16an expensive collection of
- 00:02:18atoll atoll rifts and the spratlys
- 00:02:22are where the fish spawn they lay their
- 00:02:25eggs there
- 00:02:26and the eggs and larvae of the fish that
- 00:02:28spawn here are carried by carrots
- 00:02:31to the coast of china vietnam luzon
- 00:02:34palawan sulu si the coast of
- 00:02:38indonesia here in the natunas coast of
- 00:02:41borneo vietnam and that's why we have a
- 00:02:44lot of fish
- 00:02:44in the south china sea if you remove the
- 00:02:46spratlys you will not get as much fish
- 00:02:49as you have now in the south china sea
- 00:02:52the south china sea is also rich
- 00:02:54in methane hydrates what are methane
- 00:02:57hydrates
- 00:02:58there are lumps of minerals found in the
- 00:03:01bottom of the sea
- 00:03:03in the bottom of the sea where the
- 00:03:04temperature is very cold
- 00:03:06and the pressure is very strong ice
- 00:03:09crystals form
- 00:03:10around natural gas so natural gas
- 00:03:13is encapsulated in ice crystals
- 00:03:16and there's now a technology to extract
- 00:03:20this
- 00:03:21natural gas methane hydrates
- 00:03:24are estimated to be more
- 00:03:27abundant than oil and gas combined
- 00:03:31the world reserves of methane hydrates
- 00:03:34are more than the combined reserves of
- 00:03:37oil and gas
- 00:03:38in the world and china has estimated
- 00:03:41that
- 00:03:42the methane hydrates in the south china
- 00:03:44sea could power the chinese economy
- 00:03:47for a hundred years at least so
- 00:03:51china now is testing here in the coast
- 00:03:54of guangdong
- 00:03:55a pilot area where they are extracting
- 00:03:58methane hydrates
- 00:04:00china is a technology to extract natural
- 00:04:03gas from methane hydrates
- 00:04:05uss the technology and canada has the
- 00:04:08technology and japan also has that
- 00:04:10technology
- 00:04:11so the south china sea
- 00:04:14is now a very important international
- 00:04:17waterway
- 00:04:18of the 5.3 trillion
- 00:04:22shipboard goods that pass through the
- 00:04:24south china sea every year
- 00:04:26about a trillion of that is u.s inbound
- 00:04:29and outbound trade and another trillion
- 00:04:32is uh
- 00:04:33european union inbound and outbound
- 00:04:35trade so these
- 00:04:37countries outside of the region have
- 00:04:40an interest in maintaining peace and
- 00:04:42stability in the south china sea because
- 00:04:45their exports and imports pass through
- 00:04:49the south china sea and the south china
- 00:04:52sea is also dotted with hundreds of
- 00:04:55small rocks above water high tide if the
- 00:04:58rock
- 00:04:59is only an inch above water at high tide
- 00:05:03it's considered still land or territory
- 00:05:06entitled to a territorial sea of 12
- 00:05:09nautical
- 00:05:10miles all around what is the surface
- 00:05:12area of that
- 00:05:13that's about 155 000 hectares how
- 00:05:17large is 155 000 hectares that's more
- 00:05:20than twice the land area of
- 00:05:22metro manila more than twice the land
- 00:05:24area of
- 00:05:25singapore so if you own a tiny rock
- 00:05:30one inch of water at high tide in the
- 00:05:33south china sea
- 00:05:34you own everything within the
- 00:05:36territorial sea you own all the fish
- 00:05:38oil gas and mineral resources so
- 00:05:42a tiny rock in the middle of the south
- 00:05:44china sea is very
- 00:05:45valuable so that countries now
- 00:05:49fight over these small rocks and that's
- 00:05:53why
- 00:05:53we have the south china sea dispute
- 00:05:55because those rocks
- 00:05:57are very valuable even if you cannot
- 00:05:59grow a single tree in the truck
- 00:06:02it still has a 12 nautical mile
- 00:06:05territorial sea around that and that's a
- 00:06:07huge
- 00:06:08area and also even if the rock is
- 00:06:10submerged at high tide
- 00:06:12it is still a value in the proceedings
- 00:06:14of the hague
- 00:06:15we showed the tribunal pagasa that's our
- 00:06:18largest island in the spread list
- 00:06:20and we told the tribunal that pagasa
- 00:06:24being above water at high tide it's
- 00:06:26about 45 hectares
- 00:06:28in area it has a territorial sea around
- 00:06:31it 12 nautical miles
- 00:06:33but in this area there is a low tide
- 00:06:36rack here
- 00:06:37and under ankles a low tide wrap can be
- 00:06:40used
- 00:06:41to measure the 12 nautical miles so if
- 00:06:43you measure the 12 nautical mile
- 00:06:45from this rock then we have an extended
- 00:06:49here
- 00:06:50our territorials is more than 12
- 00:06:51nautical miles from the coastline of
- 00:06:53pagasa
- 00:06:54because we're measuring it from this
- 00:06:56rock that is low tide
- 00:06:58that track is not land it is not
- 00:07:00territory because it's submerged at high
- 00:07:02tide but
- 00:07:03you can see it at low tide that's why
- 00:07:05it's called the low tide rock
- 00:07:07it still has a value because it can
- 00:07:09extend your territorial sea
- 00:07:12and the tribunal upheld us and that's
- 00:07:14why the tribunal said
- 00:07:16subi reef is part of the territorial sea
- 00:07:19of pagasa
- 00:07:20because if you measure the 12 nautical
- 00:07:22mile territorial sea from this
- 00:07:24rock subaru is part of the territorial
- 00:07:27sea
- 00:07:27if it's measured from the coastline here
- 00:07:29of pagasa should be if it's outside our
- 00:07:31territorial sea
- 00:07:32but ankles allows that under article 13
- 00:07:37part of one we can use this as our
- 00:07:40baseline
- 00:07:41the low tide rock now china did not
- 00:07:43participate
- 00:07:44in the proceedings of the hague but
- 00:07:46china submitted a position paper
- 00:07:48china said we're not participating but
- 00:07:50this is our position
- 00:07:52and this is in that position paper china
- 00:07:55said
- 00:07:56we own the south china sea because we
- 00:07:58owned it since
- 00:07:592000 years ago we were the first country
- 00:08:02to discover name explore and exploit
- 00:08:05the resources of the south sea island
- 00:08:08this is the historical narrative of
- 00:08:10china while they're claiming the south
- 00:08:13china sea as theirs
- 00:08:14and this historical narrative has been
- 00:08:17taught to every chinese citizen from
- 00:08:19grade school to college
- 00:08:21so every chinese general admiral
- 00:08:23politburo member
- 00:08:24diplomat professor businessman
- 00:08:27bureaucrat
- 00:08:29they have been taught this historical
- 00:08:31narrative
- 00:08:32and they sincerely believe it they
- 00:08:35sincerely believe that they own the
- 00:08:36south china sea since 2000 years ago
- 00:08:39they were the first to discover name and
- 00:08:41exploit exploit
- 00:08:43this historical narrative is totally
- 00:08:46false
- 00:08:47i call this the fake news of the
- 00:08:50millennium
- 00:08:51the fake history of the millennium it's
- 00:08:53totally false and we will
- 00:08:55i will prove it here now in 2009
- 00:08:59china submitted this map to the united
- 00:09:01nations
- 00:09:02this is called the nine dash line map of
- 00:09:05china
- 00:09:05and the note verbal that accompanied the
- 00:09:08smap china said
- 00:09:09we own everything within the nine dash
- 00:09:11line
- 00:09:13and the tribunal that he said
- 00:09:16it is only from this date that the world
- 00:09:20was notified
- 00:09:21of china's claim although the nine dash
- 00:09:24line map was
- 00:09:25made by china in 1947
- 00:09:28it was only uh distributed within china
- 00:09:33and it did not bind the world from 2009
- 00:09:37when this was submitted to the u.n
- 00:09:40that was the time when countries should
- 00:09:42object and we objected to this map we
- 00:09:45protested
- 00:09:46china does not own the waters within the
- 00:09:48nine dash line and
- 00:09:50indonesia protested vietnam protested
- 00:09:54so many countries protested now in 2013
- 00:09:58china published a new map this is called
- 00:10:00the vertical map because the orientation
- 00:10:02is vertical
- 00:10:04and in this map china added the 10th
- 00:10:06dash on the eastern side of
- 00:10:08taiwan so the nine dash lines are still
- 00:10:10growing up to today
- 00:10:12there are ten dashes now but i still
- 00:10:14call it the nine dash line
- 00:10:16and in this map if you look at the
- 00:10:18legend of the map
- 00:10:20this shading which means national
- 00:10:24boundary
- 00:10:25is the shading you find in the ten
- 00:10:27dashes
- 00:10:28the same shading on the continental land
- 00:10:30boundary of china
- 00:10:32so china treats the waters within the
- 00:10:35ten dashes here in the same way it
- 00:10:37treats its
- 00:10:38territory here it's land territory
- 00:10:42china treats the waters as its national
- 00:10:46territory and we protested also this map
- 00:10:50now let's go back to a little bit of
- 00:10:53history
- 00:10:54what happened in the south china sea
- 00:10:56from 1946
- 00:10:57to 2017. before world war
- 00:11:01ii the southernmost territory of china
- 00:11:04was heinen
- 00:11:05not a single chinese sailor soldier was
- 00:11:08stationed
- 00:11:09in the south china sea not in the
- 00:11:12paracels none in the spread list not in
- 00:11:14scarborough shoal
- 00:11:16so throughout the chinese dynasties
- 00:11:19the southernmost territory of china was
- 00:11:22hainan
- 00:11:23china never occupied any of the
- 00:11:25territory islands in the south china sea
- 00:11:29now when did china move out
- 00:11:32of the hainan
- 00:11:35before world war ii just before world
- 00:11:37war ii
- 00:11:39the japanese seized the paracels from
- 00:11:42the french the french
- 00:11:43occupied the paracels at the time
- 00:11:47and japan also occupied
- 00:11:50ituaba the largest island in the
- 00:11:52spratleys and
- 00:11:54japan put up a submarine base in itu-aba
- 00:11:57that submarine base was used in the
- 00:11:59invasion of the philippines
- 00:12:00with the defeat of the japanese forces
- 00:12:03so the japanese forces left the south
- 00:12:05china sea
- 00:12:07china made its move in 1946
- 00:12:11after the world war ii when the japanese
- 00:12:14forces
- 00:12:14left the south china sea china seized
- 00:12:19half of the paracels the other half of
- 00:12:21the paracels
- 00:12:22was recovered by the french and
- 00:12:24inherited by the south vietnamese
- 00:12:26government
- 00:12:27and also in 1946 china
- 00:12:32seized ituaba that submarine base of the
- 00:12:35japanese
- 00:12:36so china made a great leap in 1946
- 00:12:40from hainan to the paracels
- 00:12:44and to the spratlys in 1974 towards the
- 00:12:47dying days of the vietnam war
- 00:12:50china seized the other half of the
- 00:12:51paracels from the south vietnamese
- 00:12:53government which was very weak
- 00:12:55at the time already there was a
- 00:12:58battle there the battle of the paracels
- 00:13:01in 1987 china
- 00:13:05put up a radar weather station on fiery
- 00:13:08cross
- 00:13:08reef in 1987 unesco was conducting
- 00:13:13a global oceanic survey and china
- 00:13:16volunteered
- 00:13:17china said we will help unesco we will
- 00:13:20put up
- 00:13:20raider weather station on fiery cross
- 00:13:22rift to help unesco
- 00:13:24and it was a very noble act nobody
- 00:13:26objected everybody applauded china
- 00:13:29today fiery cross rift is an air naval
- 00:13:33base of china
- 00:13:34in 1988 china sees subi from the
- 00:13:38philippines
- 00:13:40we did not even notice it it was not
- 00:13:41reported in the
- 00:13:43newspapers in manila we were not
- 00:13:46familiar then with the antlers
- 00:13:49but china sees uh subreef and at the
- 00:13:51same time china sees
- 00:13:53johnson softly from the vietnamese from
- 00:13:56the communist vietnamese and there was a
- 00:13:58skirmish
- 00:14:00in this johnson south reef between the
- 00:14:03vietnamese and the chinese and about 69
- 00:14:07vietnamese sailors were killed
- 00:14:09in the skirmish 1995 china seized
- 00:14:12mystery free from the philippines that
- 00:14:14was widely reported
- 00:14:15widely reported in the papers in manila
- 00:14:192012 china seized scarborough shoal from
- 00:14:21the philippines
- 00:14:22widely reported also and 2013
- 00:14:27china seized lucuna shoals from malaysia
- 00:14:30lucuna church is just
- 00:14:3154 nautical miles from the coast of
- 00:14:35sabah 2015 2016
- 00:14:39china started building air naval bases
- 00:14:43on its seven geologic features in the
- 00:14:45spratlys china started reclaiming
- 00:14:48those geological features
- 00:14:51creating artificial islands 2017
- 00:14:55china's cease and decay from the
- 00:14:57philippines
- 00:14:59china seized it by surrounding san diego
- 00:15:01by
- 00:15:02with its maritime militia vessels the
- 00:15:04same way that it
- 00:15:06ceased scarborough from the philippines
- 00:15:08china surrounded it with their vessels
- 00:15:10their coast guard vessels and their
- 00:15:12maritime vessels
- 00:15:13and that's how they seized sand decay
- 00:15:17from the philippines and decay is just
- 00:15:19two nautical miles from
- 00:15:21pagasa our largest island in the
- 00:15:25spratlys but the duterte administration
- 00:15:28is still in denial
- 00:15:30the third administration does not does
- 00:15:32not
- 00:15:34accept that or does not tell the
- 00:15:36filipino people
- 00:15:38that we have lost syndicate to the
- 00:15:41chinese
- 00:15:42so if you look at this uh
- 00:15:46developments from 1946 to 2017
- 00:15:50you will see a creeping expansion
- 00:15:54by china in the south china sea
- 00:15:57and that is exactly what happened from
- 00:16:001946 to 2017.
- 00:16:03in february 2016 a few months before the
- 00:16:08tribunal issued its ruling in july
- 00:16:102016 the chinese foreign minister
- 00:16:13minister wang yi gave a talk
- 00:16:17in washington dc at the csis that's the
- 00:16:21leading think tank
- 00:16:22in washington d.c and before diplomats
- 00:16:24from all over the world
- 00:16:27foreign minister wang said china and the
- 00:16:30philippines are very close
- 00:16:32neighbors separated by just a narrow
- 00:16:35body of water
- 00:16:37china and the philippines are very close
- 00:16:40neighbors separated by a narrow body of
- 00:16:42water
- 00:16:43think of that how can we be very close
- 00:16:46neighbors
- 00:16:47separated by just a narrow body of water
- 00:16:51this is it since the 9 dash line
- 00:16:54constitutes
- 00:16:54nash the national boundary of china
- 00:16:57china
- 00:16:58owns all of the waters to the west and
- 00:17:01we are left with
- 00:17:02this sliver of water as our territorial
- 00:17:05sea
- 00:17:05and exclusive economic zone so from
- 00:17:08balabak island
- 00:17:09our southernmost island facing the south
- 00:17:11china sea
- 00:17:12chinese territory is just 64 kilometers
- 00:17:16away
- 00:17:17from buli now in pangasinan chinese
- 00:17:20territory is just
- 00:17:2170 kilometers away from miami island
- 00:17:25our southernmost territory in the
- 00:17:27botanist chinese
- 00:17:28territory china's boundary is just 44
- 00:17:31kilometers away
- 00:17:34this is the historical narrative that's
- 00:17:36been taught to every chinese citizen
- 00:17:42so when president xi jinping came here
- 00:17:45last november
- 00:17:462018 before his actual arrival
- 00:17:50the ambassador of china ambassador zhao
- 00:17:54wrote an opinion piece in philippine
- 00:17:57star
- 00:17:58he wrote it it appeared in november 15
- 00:18:012018 and
- 00:18:05in that opinion piece his opening
- 00:18:08sentence said stated that being
- 00:18:11separated by only a narrow strip of
- 00:18:14water
- 00:18:15china and the philippines have been
- 00:18:16close neighbors for centuries
- 00:18:19so this is the historical narrative
- 00:18:21again this
- 00:18:23according to ambassador is the context
- 00:18:25of the visit
- 00:18:26of president xi jinping to manila since
- 00:18:29the philippines and china are very close
- 00:18:31neighbors
- 00:18:32president zhao is visiting the
- 00:18:33philippines
- 00:18:35and this was officially published
- 00:18:39in the philippine star and i asked the
- 00:18:42star editors
- 00:18:44who provided this picture and the editor
- 00:18:47said
- 00:18:47ambassador zhao so the subtle message of
- 00:18:50the chinese is that
- 00:18:52president duterte and the entire cabinet
- 00:18:55agree that the philippines and china
- 00:18:59have been very close neighbors for
- 00:19:01centuries
- 00:19:02separated by only a narrow strip of
- 00:19:05water
- 00:19:06the dirty administration never contested
- 00:19:10this
- 00:19:11never objected to this
- 00:19:14so um the presidency finally arrived
- 00:19:18in manila and he when he arrived
- 00:19:22he published an opinion piece front
- 00:19:26full page in manila bulletin and
- 00:19:29philippine star
- 00:19:30and in that full page ad
- 00:19:33was entitled open up new future together
- 00:19:37for philippines china philippines
- 00:19:39relations
- 00:19:41and in his opinion piece president xi
- 00:19:44said over 600 years ago chinese
- 00:19:47navigator
- 00:19:48jiang hai made multiple visits to manila
- 00:19:51visaya sulu
- 00:19:52on his seven overseas voyages
- 00:19:55so presidency was telling everybody in
- 00:19:59the philippines that
- 00:20:00the chinese were here in manila
- 00:20:04over 600 years ago
- 00:20:07why did presidency say this because
- 00:20:11last year 2019 the spaniards celebrated
- 00:20:16the 500 year
- 00:20:17departure of magellan from spain to the
- 00:20:20philippines
- 00:20:21magellan left spain in 15 1519
- 00:20:25and two and a half years later he
- 00:20:27arrived in the philippines in 1521
- 00:20:30so next year 2021 we will be celebrating
- 00:20:33the
- 00:20:34500 year anniversary of magellan
- 00:20:37and the arrival of christianity but
- 00:20:39presidency is saying
- 00:20:41no we were ahead we were in the
- 00:20:43philippines
- 00:20:44600 years ago that the spaniards arrived
- 00:20:47500 years ago only
- 00:20:48so president z is saying we were ahead
- 00:20:51of the spaniards by over a hundred years
- 00:20:54so the chinese are saying we were the
- 00:20:56first to discover the philippines
- 00:20:59and the consequence of that is since we
- 00:21:01were the first to discover
- 00:21:03the the islands in the philippines
- 00:21:05belong to us but
- 00:21:07they will say we are generous we will
- 00:21:09not recover
- 00:21:10luzon visayas and mindanao but we will
- 00:21:13keep the spratly sense car bottle show
- 00:21:16that is the message of president
- 00:21:19z but this narrative is totally false
- 00:21:24jenge never visited the philippines
- 00:21:28that's uh the article of uh
- 00:21:31president z in philippine star that's in
- 00:21:34manila bulletin
- 00:21:36now there is an international zhang
- 00:21:39society and they have a branch in
- 00:21:41singapore
- 00:21:43these are composed of scholars and in
- 00:21:462005
- 00:21:47the singapore zheng hai international
- 00:21:49society published a book
- 00:21:52admiral jenga and southeast asia and
- 00:21:55one of the articles in that book was
- 00:21:56written by professor
- 00:21:58shu and his title of his article is did
- 00:22:01admiral zhang have
- 00:22:03visited the philippines professor shu
- 00:22:05said
- 00:22:08zheng hai never visited the philippines
- 00:22:11the word chanchang was actually
- 00:22:13a ming dynasty name for a malay state in
- 00:22:16indochina
- 00:22:17they thought that chan chang refers to
- 00:22:20luzon
- 00:22:22but professor hsu said chan cheng
- 00:22:26is a ming dynasty name for a malay state
- 00:22:28in indo china
- 00:22:30was there a malay state state in china
- 00:22:32yes
- 00:22:33the cham kingdom the champs
- 00:22:36were descended from the austronesians we
- 00:22:39filipinos are descended from the
- 00:22:41austronations
- 00:22:43we speak a language tagalog is derived
- 00:22:46from the australian language
- 00:22:48and the language of the champs was also
- 00:22:51derived from the austronation language
- 00:22:54and the champs put up a powerful
- 00:22:57maritime kingdom
- 00:22:58in central vietnam this was
- 00:23:02before the arrival of the europeans
- 00:23:06in the south china sea so this was
- 00:23:08before uh
- 00:23:09the 1400s before the 14th century
- 00:23:14uh the champs were so powerful
- 00:23:17that the south china sea was called the
- 00:23:19champ c
- 00:23:21the first name ever given to the south
- 00:23:23china sea was the champ c
- 00:23:25because the champs were a maritime
- 00:23:29powerful maritime kingdom in central
- 00:23:32vietnam facing
- 00:23:33the champ c last december i visited the
- 00:23:38dhanang in central vietnam and there is
- 00:23:41indanang
- 00:23:42a cha museum and one of the books sold
- 00:23:45there is this book
- 00:23:47and the book says that the name
- 00:23:50changing comes from the term
- 00:23:55pura that means they're the town of
- 00:23:58champa
- 00:23:58and the inhabitants of the champa
- 00:24:01kingdom
- 00:24:02were champs and they were the champ
- 00:24:06language fell
- 00:24:07under the austronesian umbrella these
- 00:24:09the champs were our
- 00:24:11these are were distant cousins because
- 00:24:14they were austrian nations just like us
- 00:24:16so jenga actually visited
- 00:24:21central vietnam and and chan chang is
- 00:24:25center in central vietnam not
- 00:24:27in the philippines now there is a
- 00:24:30chinese scholar he works in the people's
- 00:24:33republic of china the naval hydrographic
- 00:24:35institute
- 00:24:36he wrote an article in the international
- 00:24:38hydrographic review
- 00:24:39in 1988 and he
- 00:24:42he traced the root of the voyages of
- 00:24:45jenge
- 00:24:46from from china to central vietnam
- 00:24:51all the way to the strait of malacca
- 00:24:53here is the philippines
- 00:24:55so zhang hai never even saw the
- 00:24:58coastlines of the philippines
- 00:25:00and this is from a chinese scholar who
- 00:25:03works
- 00:25:04in the people's republic of china now in
- 00:25:072018
- 00:25:10national geographic magazine published
- 00:25:13an article
- 00:25:14on the seven voyages of jinger and
- 00:25:17that article contained
- 00:25:20a chart of the voyage of jenga the
- 00:25:23nautical
- 00:25:25root of jenga and it follows the same
- 00:25:27route
- 00:25:28from china he went to central vietnam
- 00:25:32through the narrow strait of malacca the
- 00:25:35philippines is here
- 00:25:37so jenkins never visited the philippines
- 00:25:40in fact
- 00:25:40all the scholars all over the world are
- 00:25:42unanimous
- 00:25:44jenge never visited the philippines
- 00:25:47now the largest island in the spratleys
- 00:25:49uh
- 00:25:50is itu-aba that's a picture of the
- 00:25:54spread list it's about
- 00:25:5645 hectares compared to
- 00:25:59pagasa pagasa by the way is 36 hectares
- 00:26:02only
- 00:26:03so this is occupied now by taiwan
- 00:26:08the issue in the arbitration is
- 00:26:11is this island capable of human
- 00:26:13habitation of its own
- 00:26:15because if it's capable of human
- 00:26:16habitation of its own
- 00:26:18it is entitled to a 12 nautical mile
- 00:26:20territorial sea
- 00:26:21plus an extended continental shelf
- 00:26:25up to 200 nautical miles
- 00:26:28now if this island is not capable of
- 00:26:31human habitation of its own
- 00:26:33then none of the islands in the spratlys
- 00:26:36would also be
- 00:26:37capable of human habitation of its own
- 00:26:39and therefore
- 00:26:40all islands and spatles will be entitled
- 00:26:42only to 12 nautical mile territorial sea
- 00:26:45china has declared
- 00:26:49that etuaba
- 00:26:53is capable of generating 200 nautical
- 00:26:56mile eez
- 00:26:57so that that eez will overlap with the
- 00:27:01ease of palawan
- 00:27:03and there will be an overlapping eez and
- 00:27:06therefore
- 00:27:07since china made a reservation in
- 00:27:102006 that in case of
- 00:27:14overlapping eez china will not be
- 00:27:17subjected will not submit itself to
- 00:27:20compulsory arbitration
- 00:27:22and therefore since this island has
- 00:27:26an easy the tribunal today gets no
- 00:27:29jurisdiction over the case
- 00:27:30so the issue of whether abba
- 00:27:34is capable of human habitation of its
- 00:27:36own or not
- 00:27:38was crucial in the case because if it
- 00:27:41was capable of human habitation
- 00:27:43then its easy of 200 nautical miles
- 00:27:46would overlap with the easy of palawan
- 00:27:49and therefore the tribunal has no
- 00:27:51jurisdiction
- 00:27:52because this island is
- 00:27:56just over 200 nautical miles from
- 00:27:58palawan
- 00:28:01now what is the ruling of what was the
- 00:28:03ruling of the tribunal the tribunal said
- 00:28:06to determine whether an island is
- 00:28:09capable of human habitation or not you
- 00:28:11must look at its
- 00:28:12natural condition whether it can sustain
- 00:28:16a stable community of people and
- 00:28:20in itu abba people can live there
- 00:28:23because
- 00:28:24taiwan has put up two desalination
- 00:28:26plants
- 00:28:28people can gather as a
- 00:28:32there are vegetable gardens there there
- 00:28:34are fruit trees there because taiwan
- 00:28:36imported garden soil from taipei and
- 00:28:40placed it up in ituaba so
- 00:28:44you can plant fruit trees there now in
- 00:28:47itu abba
- 00:28:48but the tribunal said that will not
- 00:28:50count because you must look at the
- 00:28:52natural condition
- 00:28:54and the tribunal said it is natural
- 00:28:57condition
- 00:28:58it's a borderline case whether
- 00:29:01itu-abba can support a stable community
- 00:29:05of people there is water
- 00:29:07when there is rain but when there is no
- 00:29:10rain
- 00:29:10you don't find water in itu abba the top
- 00:29:14soil is very thin so
- 00:29:16it's a borderline case and in case of uh
- 00:29:20in in that case if it's a borderline
- 00:29:21case you must look at the historical
- 00:29:25presence of people in it
- 00:29:28did people actually inhabit it in the
- 00:29:31past
- 00:29:33there is no record whatsoever none so
- 00:29:35the tribune said
- 00:29:37since there has been no record of human
- 00:29:40habitation into
- 00:29:41abba then it's probably because it
- 00:29:44is not capable of human habitation of
- 00:29:46its own
- 00:29:47so the ruling was etuaba the largest
- 00:29:50island in the spratleys
- 00:29:52is not capable of human habitation of
- 00:29:54its own and therefore it has no easy
- 00:29:57it is only a territorial sea and that
- 00:30:00was
- 00:30:01the reason why the tribune said we have
- 00:30:04jurisdiction
- 00:30:05because there is no overlapping easy
- 00:30:07between palawan
- 00:30:08and any of the features in the spread
- 00:30:10list okay let's go to scarborough shoal
- 00:30:14that's scarborough shoal just a
- 00:30:19piece of rock that's at the
- 00:30:22high tide that's the only thing you can
- 00:30:24see so
- 00:30:25it's a high tide elevation it's above
- 00:30:27water high tide so it's land it's
- 00:30:28territory
- 00:30:30china says it's capable of human
- 00:30:31habitation of its own and it's entitled
- 00:30:33to 200 nautical mile
- 00:30:35exclusive economic zone and we said of
- 00:30:37course not it's so obvious it's not
- 00:30:39capable of human habitation
- 00:30:41not a single blade of grass grows there
- 00:30:43you cannot squeeze a single drop of
- 00:30:45fresh water
- 00:30:46and so the tribunal agreed with us that
- 00:30:49scarborough show is just a rock
- 00:30:52it's entitled to 12 nautical mile
- 00:30:54territorial sea but
- 00:30:55that's all it cannot generate an
- 00:30:57exclusive economic zone
- 00:31:00the the tribunal of course said that uh
- 00:31:03under unclass a coastal state can claim
- 00:31:0612 nautical miles territorial sea
- 00:31:09and if there's space an additional
- 00:31:12188 nautical miles or a total of 200
- 00:31:14nautical miles from the coastline
- 00:31:16and if there's space another 150
- 00:31:19nautical miles
- 00:31:20so the maximum that the state can claim
- 00:31:23under ankles
- 00:31:24is 350 nautical miles china is claiming
- 00:31:28more than 350 nautical miles china is
- 00:31:31claiming
- 00:31:32read bank which is about 800 nautical
- 00:31:34miles from
- 00:31:35hainan so the claim of china to waters
- 00:31:39within the nine dash line
- 00:31:41beyond 350 nautical miles has
- 00:31:44no legal basis that's the ruling of the
- 00:31:48tribunal
- 00:31:49every state in the world every coastal
- 00:31:51state can claim only
- 00:31:53up to 350 nautical miles 12 nautical
- 00:31:57miles territorial c
- 00:31:59nautical miles easy measured from the
- 00:32:02coastline
- 00:32:03and an additional 150 nautical miles
- 00:32:05measured from the
- 00:32:06edge of the eez that's all you cannot
- 00:32:09claim beyond that
- 00:32:11because that's enclosed that's the law
- 00:32:14of the sea
- 00:32:15and so we were very confident
- 00:32:18that the tribunal would uphold us
- 00:32:22in in our position that the nine dash
- 00:32:25line has no legal basis at all
- 00:32:27to claim waters beyond what is allowed
- 00:32:30under ankles
- 00:32:32but our problem was we knew that the
- 00:32:35problem would be
- 00:32:36how to enforce the ruling because
- 00:32:39the chinese people have been taught
- 00:32:41historical narrative that they own the
- 00:32:43south china sea
- 00:32:45and the chinese government will not
- 00:32:47comply with the ruling because the
- 00:32:48chinese people will say
- 00:32:50why are you giving away territory that
- 00:32:54has been handed down to us by
- 00:32:56ancestors these are sacred waters sacred
- 00:32:59territory sacred islands
- 00:33:01so the chinese government would not
- 00:33:03comply otherwise
- 00:33:05the chinese people might throw them out
- 00:33:08so we had to ask the tribunal
- 00:33:12kindly rule on whether that historical
- 00:33:15narrative of
- 00:33:16china is true or false whether there is
- 00:33:19there are factual there's factual basis
- 00:33:21for that historical narrative
- 00:33:23thankfully the tribunal obliged so we
- 00:33:26raised this issue
- 00:33:28as a matter of fact did china have
- 00:33:31historic rights
- 00:33:32we're talking of history now not a
- 00:33:36legal basis so we
- 00:33:39how did we convince the tribunal that
- 00:33:41china never had historic rights
- 00:33:44well we presented over 170 ancient maps
- 00:33:48the most number of maps submitted in any
- 00:33:51international arbitration
- 00:33:52and represented maps of the chinese
- 00:33:56dynasties
- 00:33:58which they cannot with china cannot
- 00:34:00disown
- 00:34:01we presented philippine maps and maps of
- 00:34:04other southeast asian countries and
- 00:34:06represented
- 00:34:07european maps of asia made by
- 00:34:10european cartographers and we presented
- 00:34:14official documents of china after the
- 00:34:17qing dynasty
- 00:34:19so let's go to the maps for the
- 00:34:21philippines
- 00:34:22i will present only one map the most
- 00:34:24important map of the philippines
- 00:34:26this is the 1734 murillo velarde map
- 00:34:31and this map is the first map
- 00:34:36to give a name to scarborough and that
- 00:34:39name is spanakot
- 00:34:42this is the first map that gave a name
- 00:34:45to scarborough and the name is a tagalog
- 00:34:48word panakot
- 00:34:51banakot means danger if you are the
- 00:34:53captain of a ship
- 00:34:54and you don't know where pinacot is your
- 00:34:56ship could hit the rocks of panakot and
- 00:34:58your ship will run the ground
- 00:35:00and that is what happened to a british
- 00:35:02tea clipper ship
- 00:35:03called scarborough it ran aground on
- 00:35:06panako shore
- 00:35:07on the rocks of panakot and the european
- 00:35:10cartographers
- 00:35:11renamed the show scarborough shoal
- 00:35:14but we were the first to give it a name
- 00:35:17there is no
- 00:35:17older map from china or from vietnam or
- 00:35:20from any other country
- 00:35:22showing that scarborough show belongs to
- 00:35:25them
- 00:35:25or scarborough is their territory we
- 00:35:28have
- 00:35:29the oldest map and this map also
- 00:35:35shows los bajos de paragua
- 00:35:38paraguay is the old spanish name of
- 00:35:40palawan
- 00:35:41it was named palawan only during this
- 00:35:43american regime
- 00:35:45los balz is the spanish term for shoals
- 00:35:48the shoals of
- 00:35:49paraguay the shoals of paraguay are the
- 00:35:52spratleys
- 00:35:54and there is no older map from china
- 00:35:57from vietnam
- 00:35:58showing that the spratlys belong to them
- 00:36:02we have the oldest map showing the
- 00:36:05spratleys with a name
- 00:36:07this is the first time that the
- 00:36:08spratlists were given a name
- 00:36:10los balos de paragua now this map was
- 00:36:14made by father pedro meruel velarde
- 00:36:16a jesuit priest he was probably the most
- 00:36:19brilliant spanish
- 00:36:21friar who was sent to the philippines
- 00:36:23during the spanish regime and the
- 00:36:26engraver of this map because this is
- 00:36:28engraved in copper plates
- 00:36:30the engraving of this map is a filipino
- 00:36:33nicolas de la cruz
- 00:36:35and the one who the artist who drew this
- 00:36:37map is another filipino
- 00:36:39francisco suarez and
- 00:36:43why is this map important it is
- 00:36:46important because of this cartouche
- 00:36:49this cartouche is the royal coat of arms
- 00:36:54of the king of spain which means
- 00:36:57this is an official map of the spanish
- 00:37:00kingdom showing philippine territory
- 00:37:04in 1734
- 00:37:07that's the cartouche in 1732
- 00:37:11king philip the fifth of spain
- 00:37:13instructed
- 00:37:14the spanish governor general at the time
- 00:37:17general governor general tamon to make a
- 00:37:20map
- 00:37:21of philippine territory and governor
- 00:37:24altamonte commissioned
- 00:37:25father pedro milo velarde the jesuit
- 00:37:27priest
- 00:37:29so this is an official map
- 00:37:32of the philippine territory during the
- 00:37:35spanish regime
- 00:37:36and this makes it very important because
- 00:37:39this map
- 00:37:40determines philippine territory even
- 00:37:44up to today so remember
- 00:37:47that this map shows scarborough shoal
- 00:37:51with the name of panakot and the spread
- 00:37:54list with the name of
- 00:37:55los bas de paragua we will go back to
- 00:37:57this map
- 00:37:58later ancient maps of china
- 00:38:02now china published the atlas of ancient
- 00:38:06maps in china
- 00:38:07three volumes different dates one in uh
- 00:38:111990 there were 1994 the other one in
- 00:38:141997
- 00:38:16and china cannot disown these maps
- 00:38:19because they have published this atlas
- 00:38:23official publication of the people's
- 00:38:25republic of china
- 00:38:27so we go to this map this is a map of
- 00:38:29over a thousand years ago during the
- 00:38:31tang dynasty
- 00:38:33and it shows heinen as the southernmost
- 00:38:35territory of china
- 00:38:37this is map 97 of the atlas of ancient
- 00:38:40mobs of china
- 00:38:41so during the tang dynasty the
- 00:38:43southernmost territory of china was
- 00:38:45hainan
- 00:38:47the next map is the map that was made
- 00:38:50during the song dynasty
- 00:38:521136 and this shows heinen
- 00:38:54as the southernmost territory of china
- 00:38:57there is just one copy of this map
- 00:39:00and that copy is still there in china
- 00:39:03because
- 00:39:04this is a stone map in the 1900s early
- 00:39:071900s
- 00:39:08a frenchman put a paper over the stone
- 00:39:12map and rubbed it
- 00:39:13and this is the rubbing this
- 00:39:16is now in the u.s library of congress
- 00:39:18where i downloaded a copy
- 00:39:20a high resolution and that's it and this
- 00:39:24map is map number 60 of the atlas of
- 00:39:27ancient maps of china
- 00:39:29so china cannot disown this and you can
- 00:39:32even see the stone map today
- 00:39:34it's still there in the forest of stone
- 00:39:37steel's
- 00:39:37museum in zee and china there's only one
- 00:39:40copy of this wrap
- 00:39:41it's still there so you have the
- 00:39:45song dynasty the next dynasty is the u1
- 00:39:47dynasty the mongol dynasty
- 00:39:49and this is a yuan dynasty map
- 00:39:52and it shows heinen as a southernmost
- 00:39:55territory of china
- 00:39:57this is map number 193 of the atlas of
- 00:40:00ancient months of china
- 00:40:01so during the yuan dynasty the mongol
- 00:40:04dynasty
- 00:40:05the southernmost territory of china was
- 00:40:07heinen so you have the song the of yuan
- 00:40:10and the next angus is the ming dynasty
- 00:40:12and this is a ming dynasty map and it
- 00:40:15shows hainan as the southernmost
- 00:40:17territory of china
- 00:40:19and the chinese are very
- 00:40:23this is one of their favorites uh
- 00:40:25favorite maps
- 00:40:26and they put this as smart number one of
- 00:40:29the atlas of ancient maps of china
- 00:40:31there's only one copy of this map
- 00:40:33because this map is painted on silk
- 00:40:36and the original copy is still there in
- 00:40:38the first historical archive of china
- 00:40:40in beijing so during the ming dynasty
- 00:40:44the southernmost territory of china was
- 00:40:47heinen
- 00:40:48and we go to the last dynasty of china
- 00:40:50the qing dynasty
- 00:40:53this is a map of the qing dynasty it
- 00:40:54shows heinen
- 00:40:56the southernmost territory of china this
- 00:40:58is map 129 of the atlas of ancient
- 00:41:01months of china
- 00:41:02so during the qing dynasty
- 00:41:05was the southernmost territory of china
- 00:41:07so from the
- 00:41:08from the song to the qing almost a
- 00:41:11thousand years the southernmost
- 00:41:14territory of china was heinen the qing
- 00:41:16dynasty
- 00:41:17ended in 1912. so we
- 00:41:20presented this before the tribunal we
- 00:41:23showed the map of asia
- 00:41:24and we superimposed all the maps of the
- 00:41:27chinese dynasties
- 00:41:28and it shows heinen it was the
- 00:41:31southernmost territory of china
- 00:41:33during the dynasties
- 00:41:36china never occupied the paracels never
- 00:41:38occupied the spread list never occupied
- 00:41:40scarborough
- 00:41:42now that is our submission to china
- 00:41:45we said in our submission pleading to
- 00:41:48china
- 00:41:49in the to the hague tribunal
- 00:41:52chinese territory extended no further
- 00:41:55south than hainan
- 00:41:58now when did china moved out of hainan
- 00:42:00in 1932
- 00:42:02the paracels were not occupied by any
- 00:42:05country and the french
- 00:42:07occupied the paracels in 1932. the
- 00:42:10french were then
- 00:42:11the colonial power in vietnam
- 00:42:14and china under the kumitang protested
- 00:42:18china sent a note verbal to the french
- 00:42:20government on september 29 1932
- 00:42:23protesting that's the note verbal and in
- 00:42:27that note verbal china said
- 00:42:29there are two groups in the parasites
- 00:42:32the amphitheate groups in the crescent
- 00:42:34group
- 00:42:35they lie 145 nautical miles from hainan
- 00:42:38island
- 00:42:39and form the southernmost part of
- 00:42:41chinese territory
- 00:42:43the paracels formed the southernmost
- 00:42:46part of chinese territory
- 00:42:47china in 1932 in an official declaration
- 00:42:51to the world
- 00:42:52said our southernmost territory are the
- 00:42:55paracels
- 00:42:57they cannot back out from that
- 00:43:00and so we presented it again to the
- 00:43:02tribunal chinese territory ended in the
- 00:43:04parcels never reached the spread list
- 00:43:06never reached
- 00:43:07scarborough we are already in 1932.
- 00:43:10china became a republic after the end of
- 00:43:13the qing dynasty 1912 and as a republic
- 00:43:15you must have a constitution
- 00:43:17and china had several constitutions
- 00:43:20their first constitution provincial
- 00:43:22constitution in 1914
- 00:43:24defined their territory because you must
- 00:43:26define your territory in your
- 00:43:28constitution
- 00:43:29the territory of the republic of china
- 00:43:31continues to be the territory of the
- 00:43:32former
- 00:43:33empire the people's republic of china
- 00:43:37interpreted the former empire to refer
- 00:43:40to the qing dynasty territory
- 00:43:43china did that made that the
- 00:43:46declaration in china number two history
- 00:43:49archive china international press
- 00:43:52that's in the 1980s because at that time
- 00:43:55china was trying to prove to the world
- 00:43:57that tibet
- 00:43:58forms part of china and
- 00:44:01during the qing dynasty tibet was part
- 00:44:04of china so
- 00:44:05china according to the people's republic
- 00:44:09of china that published this
- 00:44:10the former empire refers to the qing
- 00:44:13dynasty
- 00:44:14because the qing dynasty was the largest
- 00:44:16expansion of chinese territory in
- 00:44:18history
- 00:44:20that was the largest expansion of
- 00:44:22chinese territory it included tibet
- 00:44:24it included zinyang and it but
- 00:44:27unfortunately for china
- 00:44:29the children's territory of china during
- 00:44:31the qing dynasty was sainan
- 00:44:34so that is the constitution of china
- 00:44:39their territory is the territory of the
- 00:44:41qing the territory
- 00:44:43never went further south than hainan
- 00:44:46the next uh constitution of china the
- 00:44:48constitution of 1924 the same
- 00:44:51the territory of china the republic of
- 00:44:53china continues to be
- 00:44:54the traditional territory which means
- 00:44:57the territory of the qing
- 00:44:59that territory ended in hainan as the
- 00:45:02southernmost territory of china
- 00:45:041937 constitution of china
- 00:45:07still the same territory of the republic
- 00:45:09of china continues to be the territory
- 00:45:12only in the past and their largest
- 00:45:14expansion was during the qing dynasty
- 00:45:17january 1 1947 the last constitution of
- 00:45:20china
- 00:45:21still the same the repub the territory
- 00:45:23of the republic of china
- 00:45:25are those encompassed with traditional
- 00:45:27boundaries so in their own constitutions
- 00:45:31china said our territory referred to the
- 00:45:34territory of the kings
- 00:45:36the qing dynasty but that territory
- 00:45:38ended
- 00:45:39in hainan china suffered what they
- 00:45:42called the century of natural
- 00:45:43humiliation
- 00:45:44because starting in the 1820s
- 00:45:48toward until the end of the 1800s
- 00:45:52foreign powers from europe and even
- 00:45:55japan and russia
- 00:45:56occupied territories of china you have
- 00:46:00the british you have the portuguese
- 00:46:03so the chinese suffered a lot of
- 00:46:07humiliation
- 00:46:08they were defeated in several wars with
- 00:46:10the european powers
- 00:46:12so their people drew maps
- 00:46:15they called this maps map of china's
- 00:46:18national humiliation
- 00:46:19their people said when china becomes
- 00:46:22strong again
- 00:46:23we will recover all the territories that
- 00:46:25we lost to the foreign powers
- 00:46:28and they drew lines around china
- 00:46:31that we will recover everything within
- 00:46:33the alliance and they included
- 00:46:34other territories that they never owned
- 00:46:37in the past
- 00:46:38so here you will see they will get even
- 00:46:41borneo part of borneo
- 00:46:43they will get cambodia vietnam so they
- 00:46:47they these were drawn by private
- 00:46:49citizens
- 00:46:50but it was circulated widely within
- 00:46:53china
- 00:46:54that's the map of national humiliation
- 00:46:57of 1926
- 00:46:58but you will see in this map china never
- 00:47:01included the spratlys or scarborough so
- 00:47:04in their wildest
- 00:47:05dreams of recovering perceived
- 00:47:08properties that they lost
- 00:47:10they never thought that they lost the
- 00:47:12spratlys or scarborough because they
- 00:47:15never
- 00:47:15thought they owned the spratlys or
- 00:47:17scarborough
- 00:47:18but you will see here they included the
- 00:47:21sulu archipelago as part of the
- 00:47:23territory to be recovered
- 00:47:25why because in 1417 the sultan of sulu
- 00:47:30sultan paduka batara
- 00:47:34left sulu on a grand voyage to china
- 00:47:38he brought with them with him his wife
- 00:47:40his children
- 00:47:41his large entourage and they sailed
- 00:47:45to china and brought gifts
- 00:47:48to the emperor it was like a grand
- 00:47:52tour and probably he brought south sea
- 00:47:54pearls
- 00:47:55and the chinese saw it and they said oh
- 00:47:58that sultan
- 00:47:59is now a vassal of the emperor because
- 00:48:01he was given a tribute
- 00:48:03he was giving a tribute to the emperor
- 00:48:05and so they
- 00:48:06included the sulu archipelago as part of
- 00:48:08the territory of china to be recovered
- 00:48:11because sultan paduka went there
- 00:48:14giving a gift but they interpreted it
- 00:48:17the chinese interpreted it as a tribute
- 00:48:19that it became a vassal
- 00:48:22so it's very dangerous to bring a gift
- 00:48:24to china
- 00:48:26to the chinese emperor or chinese leader
- 00:48:29because they will consider that as a
- 00:48:31tribute and you become a vassal so when
- 00:48:33you give something
- 00:48:34you have to qualify and clarify
- 00:48:37that it's just a gift it's not a tribute
- 00:48:41here is another map of natural
- 00:48:42humiliation the 1938 map
- 00:48:45thankfully they excluded the sulu
- 00:48:47archipelago
- 00:48:48but still they never included the
- 00:48:51spratlys or scarborough shoal in their
- 00:48:53wildest dreams
- 00:48:55they never thought that spratlys or
- 00:48:58scarborough should belong to them
- 00:49:00so they never included the spread list
- 00:49:02or scarborough in their maps of national
- 00:49:05humiliation this map was taught to
- 00:49:08elementary school children
- 00:49:10and that's why the chinese really
- 00:49:13believed that they owned the south china
- 00:49:14sea
- 00:49:15because this includes the south china
- 00:49:18sea
- 00:49:19now in 1943 while the civil war in uh
- 00:49:24the mainland mainland china was going on
- 00:49:26between the communists and the
- 00:49:27nationalists the kubintang
- 00:49:30was in control of the government and the
- 00:49:33ministry of information of the republic
- 00:49:35of china at that time
- 00:49:36in 1943 published a handbook
- 00:49:39because the kumitang that
- 00:49:43was trying to introduce the republic of
- 00:49:45china to the world so they published a
- 00:49:46handbook
- 00:49:47china handbook and of course if you
- 00:49:49introduce yourself to the world
- 00:49:51you have to state your territory what is
- 00:49:54your territory
- 00:49:55and in chapter one of the tan book china
- 00:49:57said
- 00:49:58our territory extended to the parcel
- 00:50:00group
- 00:50:01triton island is the southernmost
- 00:50:03territory
- 00:50:04so in their 1943 handbook china never
- 00:50:08claimed the spratleys or scarborough
- 00:50:12they said our southernmost territory are
- 00:50:14the paracels
- 00:50:16their own document official document
- 00:50:19this handbook was revised
- 00:50:21that's the copy of the handbook i was
- 00:50:23able to buy it
- 00:50:25in ebay difficult to look for this book
- 00:50:27now
- 00:50:28and this was revised in 1946
- 00:50:32they published a revised edition of the
- 00:50:35book
- 00:50:36and it is in this handbook the 1946
- 00:50:40handbook
- 00:50:41which was actually published in 1947 but
- 00:50:44it contains a supplement of 1946. it is
- 00:50:48in this handbook that
- 00:50:49china claims sovereignty over the spread
- 00:50:52list they call it the coral islands
- 00:50:54but at the same time china admitted that
- 00:50:57the coral islands are contested
- 00:50:59among china the commonwealth of the
- 00:51:01philippines and the french in
- 00:51:03indo-china so china did not claim
- 00:51:05indisputable sovereignty
- 00:51:07over this fatless this is 1946.
- 00:51:11china said yes we're claiming the
- 00:51:13spratlys
- 00:51:14but it's also claimed by the philippines
- 00:51:17by
- 00:51:18the french in vietnam so they never
- 00:51:20claimed indisputable sovereignty
- 00:51:23that's the handbook 1940
- 00:51:27it was released in 1947 but there is a
- 00:51:301946 supplement so
- 00:51:32you either call it 1946 or 1947.
- 00:51:36published in new york because of the
- 00:51:38ongoing civil war they didn't have a
- 00:51:40good
- 00:51:40printing press in china now
- 00:51:44in 1947 china
- 00:51:48made this map this is the infamous nine
- 00:51:50dash line map and
- 00:51:51china circulated this internally among
- 00:51:54the chinese
- 00:51:55government offices for validation and in
- 00:51:58february of 1948
- 00:52:00china released this domestically in
- 00:52:03china
- 00:52:04and in this map the nine dash line map
- 00:52:07china now gave a name to all the
- 00:52:09features in the spread list but they
- 00:52:12just copied the names
- 00:52:14in british charts they were they did not
- 00:52:16give
- 00:52:17original names and they included
- 00:52:20scarborough but
- 00:52:21they did not have a name for scarborough
- 00:52:23show we are now in 1947
- 00:52:25and china still didn't have a name for
- 00:52:27scarborough shoal
- 00:52:28so china probably china
- 00:52:32used this uh china city directory
- 00:52:34published in 1906 by the uk
- 00:52:37and gave the same names lucuna shoulders
- 00:52:40the british name
- 00:52:41transliterated the chinese lukanyan
- 00:52:45translate transliterated jangmu so
- 00:52:49china just copied the british names they
- 00:52:51were not the first to give names to the
- 00:52:53spread list
- 00:52:55and in of course in scarborough shelby
- 00:52:57gave it a name in 1734 panagot
- 00:53:00the europeans renamed it scarborough
- 00:53:02shoal after
- 00:53:04the scarborough ship ran aground in 1748
- 00:53:071947 china still had no name
- 00:53:11to scarborough now if you go to the
- 00:53:14spread list
- 00:53:15in the paracels you will see this
- 00:53:18sovereignty stone markers
- 00:53:21these are stone markers which says china
- 00:53:23was here in
- 00:53:241901 china was here in 1902
- 00:53:28and the chinese point to these markers
- 00:53:31as
- 00:53:31evidence that they own these islands so
- 00:53:34they called it their
- 00:53:35sovereignty markers in the paracels in
- 00:53:38the spratlys
- 00:53:39these markers are totally fake
- 00:53:43and i will prove it in 1987 the province
- 00:53:46of guangdong published a book
- 00:53:49compilation of the names of all the
- 00:53:51islands in nanai south sea
- 00:53:53explaining why they named these islands
- 00:53:56the way they named them
- 00:53:57and this book has very interesting a
- 00:54:00very interesting annex
- 00:54:02and editor's note part of the book
- 00:54:06as a background in 1937 june
- 00:54:09china announced that the china was
- 00:54:11sending this guy
- 00:54:13wong chung to the paracels
- 00:54:16to check if the japanese have
- 00:54:19established bases in the paracels
- 00:54:22and to assert chinese sovereignty over
- 00:54:25the paracels that was the announcement
- 00:54:28but actually had this secret mission
- 00:54:32and he made a report of his
- 00:54:36secret mission a confidential report of
- 00:54:39july 1
- 00:54:40because he went there june
- 00:54:43so he wrote this report july the
- 00:54:45following month
- 00:54:47and in his report he said
- 00:54:50i placed these stone markers
- 00:54:53in north island it says they're
- 00:54:56commemorating the inspection of 1902
- 00:55:00in in the other part of north island
- 00:55:02commemorating the inspection of 1902
- 00:55:05in woody island commemorating the
- 00:55:07inspection of 1911.
- 00:55:09so he was planting these stone markers
- 00:55:12anti-dated stone markers
- 00:55:14in 1937 and he placed these markers in
- 00:55:18about 20
- 00:55:2024 places in the paracels
- 00:55:23he was there in 1937 he was planting
- 00:55:26markers commemorating the inspection of
- 00:55:281901
- 00:55:29so these are anti-dated now when
- 00:55:33china published the book when the
- 00:55:34guangdong province published this book
- 00:55:37a lowly clerk saw this confidential
- 00:55:40report
- 00:55:40and decided to include it as a next to
- 00:55:43the book
- 00:55:44so the confidential report became part
- 00:55:46of the book by mistake
- 00:55:49and i was alerted by a friend of mine
- 00:55:52franco javier bonnet who was written
- 00:55:54extensively on the south china sea he's
- 00:55:56a french
- 00:55:56scholar he said i saw this book
- 00:56:00in a library in hong kong and look at
- 00:56:04he got the xerox copies of several pages
- 00:56:07they said
- 00:56:08look at this all of these stone markers
- 00:56:12in the spratlys and in the paracels are
- 00:56:14fake
- 00:56:15so i said i must have a copy of this
- 00:56:17book and so i as a friend of mine who
- 00:56:19frequented frequented manila and beijing
- 00:56:22on business
- 00:56:23to look for a copy of this book in
- 00:56:25secondhand bookstores in beijing and he
- 00:56:27was able to secure to buy one copy
- 00:56:30he scoured all the bookstores in beijing
- 00:56:33and
- 00:56:34found one copy and i have that copy and
- 00:56:36this is
- 00:56:37a picture a photo of the
- 00:56:41of the of that book and
- 00:56:44i guess uh i suppose that after
- 00:56:47we published this the chinese government
- 00:56:50i understand
- 00:56:51recalled all copies of the book so this
- 00:56:53is a very rare book now
- 00:56:55so the stone markers in the paracels are
- 00:56:58fake
- 00:56:59and they cannot the chinese cannot deny
- 00:57:02this because
- 00:57:02it's there in their own publication how
- 00:57:05about the stone markers
- 00:57:07in the spratlys on page 291 of the same
- 00:57:10book
- 00:57:11there is an editor's note that the stone
- 00:57:15tablets
- 00:57:16on two islands west york island and
- 00:57:18spread the island in the spread list
- 00:57:21might have been erected by the taiwanese
- 00:57:23navy in 1956
- 00:57:24not in 1946 as the stone tablets
- 00:57:27indicate
- 00:57:28so the stone tablets in works island
- 00:57:30says erected in december 1946 the stone
- 00:57:33tablet
- 00:57:34in the spratly says erected in december
- 00:57:361946 where they really erected in 1946.
- 00:57:41in 1946 after the japanese forces left
- 00:57:44itu-aba the kumitang government sent a
- 00:57:48ship
- 00:57:49to the pa the the spatles
- 00:57:52the taiping it was a u.s ship actually
- 00:57:55donated
- 00:57:56to the kumitang and they renamed it
- 00:57:58typing
- 00:57:59and the cupping of the ship went only to
- 00:58:02it
- 00:58:02and he planted the marker there but he
- 00:58:05never went
- 00:58:06to west york island in 1946 he never
- 00:58:09went to the spread the island
- 00:58:10so when he saw the book saying that
- 00:58:13there are stone markers there in the
- 00:58:16in spratly island and in west rock
- 00:58:18island planted in december 1946
- 00:58:21he went to the editors of the book the
- 00:58:23editors of the book are professors in
- 00:58:25guangdong universities and he said
- 00:58:27i was the captain of the ship that went
- 00:58:29to itu-aba
- 00:58:31in 1946 in december we never put up any
- 00:58:35stone tablets in west york island or in
- 00:58:38spatial then
- 00:58:39we put up one only in the in itwa
- 00:58:42so the editors said they placed a note
- 00:58:46those stone tablets
- 00:58:47might have been erected by the taiwanese
- 00:58:49navy in 1956
- 00:58:51not in 1994 why 1956 because
- 00:58:55as i said after the defeat of the
- 00:58:57japanese forces in
- 00:59:001945 the kumitang
- 00:59:04took possession of itu abba in 1946
- 00:59:07but they left itu abba in
- 00:59:101949 1950 because the
- 00:59:14camkai czech forces the nationalists
- 00:59:16fled the mainland
- 00:59:18to taiwan and chai can kaikanshak
- 00:59:21recalled all the troops into about to
- 00:59:23help defend taiwan
- 00:59:24against what they expected was a
- 00:59:28communist chinese invasion of taiwan so
- 00:59:30they left
- 00:59:31and they returned only in 1956 as a
- 00:59:35taiwanese navy now that's why the
- 00:59:37editors put that
- 00:59:38editor's note and when they returned
- 00:59:41they probably
- 00:59:42erected those stone markers in west york
- 00:59:45island and spratly island
- 00:59:47and put there the date december 1946
- 00:59:51anti-dated so it's very clear those
- 00:59:53stone markers are
- 00:59:55totally fake now before the
- 00:59:59just before the we filed our case with
- 01:00:02the
- 01:00:03against china with the uncle's tribunal
- 01:00:07at the hague
- 01:00:08i visited the chinese manila website the
- 01:00:11chinese embassy website in manila
- 01:00:13and i saw this in that
- 01:00:17website this is a cringe screenshot
- 01:00:20china said we were the first to discover
- 01:00:23one yen that's scarborough show for them
- 01:00:25in
- 01:00:261279 because in 1279
- 01:00:31gusujin put up an observatory
- 01:00:34in huangyan island upon instruction of
- 01:00:37kublai khan
- 01:00:38now gusujin was the leonardo da vinci of
- 01:00:42china at the time
- 01:00:44he was a brilliant mathematician
- 01:00:46engineer
- 01:00:47he was an astronomer and
- 01:00:52he built canals for china
- 01:00:55and kublai khan instructed him make
- 01:00:58an accurate calendar because we want to
- 01:01:01know
- 01:01:03the when the four seasons will end and
- 01:01:05start
- 01:01:06when will summer come when will it end
- 01:01:10when will autumn come and will it end
- 01:01:13when will winter come and end when will
- 01:01:15uh spring come and end because we want
- 01:01:18to know
- 01:01:19when to plant when to harvest when to
- 01:01:21irrigate
- 01:01:22so gusujin put up observatories
- 01:01:26astronomical observatories
- 01:01:2826 on mainland china and one in
- 01:01:31nanhai one in the south sea where
- 01:01:34in the south sea did he put up his
- 01:01:36observatory
- 01:01:38this screenshot says the chinese embassy
- 01:01:40in manila says
- 01:01:41he put it up in scarborough hawai'ian
- 01:01:44island
- 01:01:45however in 1980 when vietnam and
- 01:01:48china were squarely over sovereignty of
- 01:01:52the paracels
- 01:01:53the vietnamese a very strong record
- 01:01:55story records that they own the
- 01:01:57paracels china pulled out a rabbit
- 01:02:01out of its hat and said we have an older
- 01:02:04title
- 01:02:04to the paracels because in 1279
- 01:02:08kublai khan ordered gusujin to put up
- 01:02:11an observatory in the paracels
- 01:02:16remember kublai khan put up 27
- 01:02:19observatories
- 01:02:2026 on mainland china and one in the
- 01:02:23south china sea south sea where in 1980
- 01:02:27the chinese were saying that was
- 01:02:28in seizure what is internationally
- 01:02:31called the parcels
- 01:02:33and they published this in beijing
- 01:02:35review
- 01:02:37in beijing review official publication
- 01:02:39of the ministry of
- 01:02:40foreign affairs of china the
- 01:02:42astronomical observation 0.9 high
- 01:02:45was in today's seizure islands that she
- 01:02:48shows that shija islands will be in the
- 01:02:50bounds of china at the time of the yuan
- 01:02:52dynasty
- 01:02:53so they said gusujin put up the
- 01:02:56observatory
- 01:02:57in the paracels today the chinese are
- 01:03:00saying gusujin put it up
- 01:03:02in scarborough shoal that's the
- 01:03:06beijing review where they published
- 01:03:08their article
- 01:03:10the paracels are here 380 nautical miles
- 01:03:12away from scarborough it's very far
- 01:03:15the brilliant guy gusujin could not have
- 01:03:17made a mistake
- 01:03:18if he put it up there in paracels he
- 01:03:21could not have put it up in
- 01:03:22scarborough shoal now of the 26
- 01:03:26observatories that gusujin put up in
- 01:03:28mainland china
- 01:03:30one still exists today in hanan province
- 01:03:34and this is it huge 12.6 meter high
- 01:03:38there's a sundial here massive bricks
- 01:03:41could he have put it this observatory
- 01:03:44on the rocks of scarborough shoal
- 01:03:48now the rocks of scarborough are very
- 01:03:50small
- 01:03:51maybe three meters high
- 01:03:54above water at high tide maybe at most
- 01:03:5710 people can
- 01:03:58stand on it could he have put it here
- 01:04:02if you superimpose the astronomical
- 01:04:05observation point in hennan it would
- 01:04:08look like that he
- 01:04:10could not have placed it there
- 01:04:11impossible so legally
- 01:04:13china cannot now say that gusujin put it
- 01:04:16up they put up the observatory in
- 01:04:18scarborough because
- 01:04:19they used that argument against the
- 01:04:21vietnamese in 1980
- 01:04:23physically it's also impossible they
- 01:04:25could not have put it up there
- 01:04:27so the tribunal said china never had
- 01:04:30historic rights in the south china sea
- 01:04:32they cannot identify
- 01:04:34the tabula is unable to identify
- 01:04:37any evidence that would suggest that
- 01:04:39china historically
- 01:04:42regulated or controlled shipping fishing
- 01:04:45rather in the south china sea
- 01:04:47scarborough shoal that's carbohydrate
- 01:04:50satellite imagery
- 01:04:51huge 150 square kilometers in the area
- 01:04:55this is the entry exit point all the
- 01:04:58around here are the coral reefs
- 01:05:00now who owns carburetion we all know
- 01:05:04that in the treaty of paris of 1898
- 01:05:06spain ceded the philippines to the us
- 01:05:09for
- 01:05:1020 million dollars the treaty of paris
- 01:05:13contained these
- 01:05:14lines the treaty lines of the city of
- 01:05:16paris
- 01:05:17and spain ceded to the u.s everything
- 01:05:20within the lines
- 01:05:22for 20 million dollars unfortunately
- 01:05:26scarborough show is outside the line the
- 01:05:29spratlys are
- 01:05:30outside the lines big problem for us
- 01:05:33so chinese foreign minister wang yi in
- 01:05:36his
- 01:05:37lecture at csis in washington in
- 01:05:39february of 2016
- 01:05:40before diplomats from all over the world
- 01:05:43said
- 01:05:44the philippine territory is regulated by
- 01:05:46three treaties
- 01:05:47the treaty of paris of 1898 the treaty
- 01:05:50of washington of 1900
- 01:05:52and the treaty of 1930 with the british
- 01:05:55and there is a line in those treaties
- 01:05:59everything to the east was seeded
- 01:06:03but to the west they were not seated
- 01:06:06and wangi said nancha
- 01:06:09the spratleys and huangyan scarborough
- 01:06:12are all in the west of 118 degrees they
- 01:06:16are
- 01:06:17outside the 3d lines so the philippines
- 01:06:20does not own these islands
- 01:06:22so how do we answer that we answer that
- 01:06:25by going to the second treaty of
- 01:06:27washington of 1900 when the americans
- 01:06:30after signing the
- 01:06:31treaty of paris the americans came here
- 01:06:34and they found out there were many
- 01:06:36islands outside the treaty lines in the
- 01:06:38batanas
- 01:06:39of scarborough in the sulu archipelago
- 01:06:43mapan island
- 01:06:44turtle island they were all outside the
- 01:06:463d lines so they went back to the
- 01:06:48spaniards
- 01:06:48they said hey let's clarify there are
- 01:06:51still many islands
- 01:06:52outside the treaty lines can we clarify
- 01:06:54that these
- 01:06:56islands were also seeded to us and the
- 01:06:58spaniards said no we will not sign
- 01:07:01and the americans said we will pay you
- 01:07:03an additional hundred thousand dollars
- 01:07:06and the spaniard said yes we will sign
- 01:07:08so the treaty of washington was signed
- 01:07:10and spain clarified that it had all
- 01:07:13solar relinquished to the us
- 01:07:14all title and claim of title which spain
- 01:07:17may have had
- 01:07:18at the time of the conclusion of the
- 01:07:19treaty of peace of paris
- 01:07:21to any and all islands belonging to the
- 01:07:25philippine archipelago
- 01:07:27lying outside the lines any and all
- 01:07:30islands
- 01:07:30belonging to the philippine archipelago
- 01:07:33lying outside the lines are also seeded
- 01:07:35to the us
- 01:07:36for an additional hundred thousand
- 01:07:38dollars so the treaty of washington is
- 01:07:40actually the more important treaty
- 01:07:43because it includes all islands
- 01:07:46belonging to the philippine archipelago
- 01:07:48within or outside the treaty lines but
- 01:07:51the treaty of washington is never taught
- 01:07:54to us
- 01:07:56that's why we have uh some
- 01:08:00uh professors even law professors who
- 01:08:03have been saying let's not talk about
- 01:08:07scarborough and the spread list because
- 01:08:09they are outside the treaty lines
- 01:08:12they have forgotten about the treaty of
- 01:08:15washington
- 01:08:16so the question is what are the islands
- 01:08:20belonging to the philippine archipelago
- 01:08:22lying outside the lines
- 01:08:24what is our frame of reference in
- 01:08:27locating these islands
- 01:08:28it says any and all islands lying
- 01:08:31outside
- 01:08:32of the treaty lines belonging to the
- 01:08:34philippine archipelago
- 01:08:35what is our frame of reference the 1734
- 01:08:38pedro murillo velarde map
- 01:08:41because this is the official philippine
- 01:08:44territory under the spanish regime
- 01:08:46and this is what they have ceded to the
- 01:08:48americans under the treaty of washington
- 01:08:51and the treaty of paris
- 01:08:53and that includes of course
- 01:08:57scarborough shoal and the spratly so
- 01:08:59this map
- 01:09:00is still alive today this map determines
- 01:09:04our territory territory that was ceded
- 01:09:07by spain to the us and which
- 01:09:10is now our territory as uh the republic
- 01:09:14of the philippines
- 01:09:15so we have to go back to this map that's
- 01:09:18why
- 01:09:19when this map was auctioned off
- 01:09:22because there's no copy of this map in
- 01:09:24our public libraries
- 01:09:26and when a copy of this map was being
- 01:09:29auctioned in sotheby's
- 01:09:32i asked the public libraries the
- 01:09:35national museums the
- 01:09:38private museums if they can bid for it
- 01:09:41and
- 01:09:42they were not interested and the
- 01:09:46public government on museums they have
- 01:09:48the budget for it so i ask a friend
- 01:09:50to bid for it and if he wins
- 01:09:54to sell it at cost to the government
- 01:09:56because i want a copy of this map
- 01:09:58in the national library so that school
- 01:10:02children when they see this map you
- 01:10:04don't have to explain to them
- 01:10:06scarborough is part of philippine
- 01:10:08territories in 1734
- 01:10:10the strategies are part of philippine
- 01:10:12territory since 1734.
- 01:10:15so he bidded for the map and fortunately
- 01:10:18he won
- 01:10:19and he has donated it because uh
- 01:10:23the government offices uh the national
- 01:10:26library national museum
- 01:10:27don't have this in their budget he just
- 01:10:29my friend just decided to donate it
- 01:10:32to the national library so it's been
- 01:10:33donated to the national library
- 01:10:37now before the ruling came out china
- 01:10:39claimed this shaded area
- 01:10:41when the tribunal said the nine dash
- 01:10:43lines have no legal effect
- 01:10:45so immediately you have high seas in the
- 01:10:48south china sea about 20 25 percent of
- 01:10:50the
- 01:10:50south china sea of isis and all around
- 01:10:53that
- 01:10:53you have the exclusive economic zone of
- 01:10:55the philippines this could belong only
- 01:10:57to the philippines because it's only the
- 01:10:59philippines
- 01:11:00that is the adjacent coastal state and
- 01:11:02this is the
- 01:11:03uh easy of malaysia in sabah isaiah of
- 01:11:07brunei
- 01:11:08is a of malaysia again in the other part
- 01:11:11of sabah
- 01:11:12the east of indonesia in the natunas the
- 01:11:15east of vietnam
- 01:11:17and the eez of china so automatically
- 01:11:20of high seas and exclusive economic
- 01:11:24zones around those sizes
- 01:11:26this area the shaded area in red
- 01:11:30is what we want how big is that that's
- 01:11:34as big as uh larger than the philippine
- 01:11:37national territory the land territory
- 01:11:40these three deaths are still disputed
- 01:11:42because they are
- 01:11:44rocks above water at high tide between
- 01:11:46the philippines and china
- 01:11:48that's still in dispute because the
- 01:11:49tribunal has no jurisdiction over
- 01:11:53territorial issues on it is only
- 01:11:55jurisdiction over maritime issues
- 01:11:58so we won an area
- 01:12:01of 376 000 square kilometers in the
- 01:12:04south china sea
- 01:12:05free from any chinese claim this is
- 01:12:08larger than our total land area if you
- 01:12:10put all our islands together
- 01:12:11you get only 300 000 square kilometers
- 01:12:14so we want
- 01:12:15an area maritime space larger than our
- 01:12:18total land area
- 01:12:19and we own everything within this huge
- 01:12:21maritime area
- 01:12:23all the fish oil gas and other mineral
- 01:12:25resources
- 01:12:27now there are many time zones under
- 01:12:30unclass
- 01:12:31assuming this is palawan you have a
- 01:12:33territorial sea of 12 nautical miles
- 01:12:35from the
- 01:12:36low water mark from the edge of the
- 01:12:38territorial sea you measure 188 nautical
- 01:12:40miles you have the
- 01:12:42eez exclusive economic zone and from
- 01:12:45here you have the high seas
- 01:12:48this is our extended container shelf uh
- 01:12:51this is the area
- 01:12:52belonging to mankind but the point here
- 01:12:55is that
- 01:12:56from the edge of the territorial cc ward
- 01:12:59there is freedom of navigation and
- 01:13:01overflight
- 01:13:02civilian aircraft military aircraft
- 01:13:04civilian vessel military vessel
- 01:13:06can sail and fly in this area without
- 01:13:09getting the consent of the coastal state
- 01:13:12because there's freedom of navigation
- 01:13:14for all
- 01:13:15countries of the world so when the
- 01:13:17ruling came out the u.s said
- 01:13:19we will sail and fly in the south china
- 01:13:21sea france said we will also
- 01:13:23sail and fly we will ask our european
- 01:13:25neighbors
- 01:13:26to join us in a regular patrol in the
- 01:13:30south china sea
- 01:13:31the british said we will do the same
- 01:13:33when our two aircraft carriers
- 01:13:35are finished we will sail them in the
- 01:13:37south china sea
- 01:13:38australia said we will continue to sail
- 01:13:40and fly
- 01:13:41in the south china sea now the tribunal
- 01:13:45made a specific finding on mischief reef
- 01:13:48the tribunals said we find mischief reef
- 01:13:52is a low tide elevation it's submerged
- 01:13:55at high tide so it's low tide you can
- 01:13:58see it only at low tide and therefore
- 01:14:01mischief reef has no territorial sea
- 01:14:05and cannot be owned because
- 01:14:08it's beyond the territory of any state
- 01:14:11and it forms part of the exclusive
- 01:14:14economic zone of the philippines so
- 01:14:16there is a clear categorical ruling
- 01:14:20by the tribunal that mischief reef
- 01:14:23has no territorial sea not editorial
- 01:14:25airspace it's part of the exclusive
- 01:14:27economic zone of the philippines
- 01:14:28and as part of the exclusive economic
- 01:14:30zone of the philippines
- 01:14:32it can only be exploited by the
- 01:14:34philippines only the philippines can put
- 01:14:37up structures there
- 01:14:38if china is still there now china is
- 01:14:40there as a squatter
- 01:14:41now that's mischief huge
- 01:14:45it's totally submerged at high tide in
- 01:14:47its natural state before the reclamation
- 01:14:49by china
- 01:14:51today three kilometer military grade
- 01:14:54runway
- 01:14:56barracks for thousands of marines you
- 01:14:58have radars
- 01:15:01structures there entry and exit for
- 01:15:04warships and submarines that's the
- 01:15:06runway in mischief reef
- 01:15:08any jet fighter here can reach manila in
- 01:15:11less than 20 minutes
- 01:15:13can reach part of princess in less than
- 01:15:1510 minutes
- 01:15:16the radar here can monitor any aircraft
- 01:15:19that lands or takes off
- 01:15:21in puerto princesa or in the entire
- 01:15:23palawan area
- 01:15:25so this one this airbase
- 01:15:28and naval base this is both an air naval
- 01:15:31base
- 01:15:32the chinese call this their pearl harbor
- 01:15:34in the south china sea
- 01:15:36this is a dagger pointed at us because
- 01:15:38this
- 01:15:39uh mischief air naval base of china
- 01:15:43will be used by china to enforce the
- 01:15:45nine dash line
- 01:15:46as china's national boundary so when the
- 01:15:49ruling came out
- 01:15:50the americans decided to test
- 01:15:53because the ruling said mischief refers
- 01:15:55no territorial see
- 01:15:56the u.s sailed this ship zigzag
- 01:16:00because if this were a territorial sea
- 01:16:02this ship should sail straight line
- 01:16:04continuous without stopping but to show
- 01:16:07to the
- 01:16:08chinese here in mischief reef that this
- 01:16:11is not a territorial sea because it's an
- 01:16:13artificial island
- 01:16:14they zigzag they conducted man overboard
- 01:16:17operations
- 01:16:18they sent a lot of their drones to proof
- 01:16:21so they are they were actually enforcing
- 01:16:23the ruling for us
- 01:16:26and this uh ship
- 01:16:29uh the uss giffords sailed there again
- 01:16:32in the
- 01:16:33sale there in november 16 recently 2019
- 01:16:37the same way to show to the chinese that
- 01:16:40this is not a territorial sea
- 01:16:42they were enforcing the ruling and this
- 01:16:45plane
- 01:16:46the u.s poseidon which can detect
- 01:16:49submarines that are submerged and can
- 01:16:51drop torpedoes from the air
- 01:16:53flew over mischief reef
- 01:16:56and this was the conversation between
- 01:17:00the chinese ground controller and in the
- 01:17:02u.s aircraft
- 01:17:04the ground controller the chinese gun
- 01:17:06controller said
- 01:17:07leave immediately to avoid any
- 01:17:09misunderstanding
- 01:17:10the u.s aircraft said we are conducting
- 01:17:13lawful military activities
- 01:17:15beyond the national airspace of any
- 01:17:17coastal state
- 01:17:18this is not a territorial airspace we
- 01:17:20can fly here
- 01:17:21because there's freedom of over flight
- 01:17:25this is part of the east of the
- 01:17:26philippines so the americans
- 01:17:29were enforcing the ruling for us not
- 01:17:31because they love us
- 01:17:33but because it's in their national
- 01:17:35interest to protect their sea lanes
- 01:17:37remember of the 5.2 trillion new
- 01:17:40trade of shipboard goods that traverse
- 01:17:42the south china sea every year
- 01:17:44over a trillion of that is us train
- 01:17:46bound and outbound trade
- 01:17:48they have to maintain freedom of
- 01:17:50navigation and overflight
- 01:17:52the french they have two naval ships
- 01:17:56that
- 01:17:57continuously sail in the south china sea
- 01:18:00because they want to maintain a naval
- 01:18:02presence in all exclusive economic zones
- 01:18:05because in the exclusive economic zones
- 01:18:07their freedom of navigation
- 01:18:09they have british they have two
- 01:18:12naval ships also sailing continuously in
- 01:18:15the south china sea because they want
- 01:18:17an unbroken presence in the south china
- 01:18:19sea because they want
- 01:18:21the rules to preserve the integrity of
- 01:18:23the rules-based international system
- 01:18:25that's the code word for the ruling they
- 01:18:27want
- 01:18:28to enforce the ruling without saying
- 01:18:31that we're enforcing the ruling
- 01:18:32there it's euphemism for them integrity
- 01:18:36of the rules-based international system
- 01:18:39the japanese have two helicopter
- 01:18:41helicopter carriers every year they
- 01:18:43alternate
- 01:18:44in sailing in the south china sea
- 01:18:47this duck in subic the last time it was
- 01:18:50here i visited it
- 01:18:51and i asked the captain of the ship
- 01:18:53where in the south china sea did you
- 01:18:55sail
- 01:18:56and he answered in the west philippine
- 01:18:59sea
- 01:19:00that's so easy what did you do in the
- 01:19:03philippine ese he said
- 01:19:05we sent aloft this helicopter that's a
- 01:19:08military activity
- 01:19:09they were telling china this is an
- 01:19:12exclusive economic zone of a coastal
- 01:19:15state
- 01:19:15and we have freedom of navigation here
- 01:19:19the indonesians at the rather the
- 01:19:21indians
- 01:19:22they have every year they send a naval
- 01:19:25task force in the south china sea
- 01:19:27to assert freedom of navigation the
- 01:19:30canadians do the same every year
- 01:19:32to preserve to assert freedom of
- 01:19:34navigation
- 01:19:35so the all these naval powers actually
- 01:19:38enforce the ruling for us because
- 01:19:39they're showing to the chinese
- 01:19:42that these are exclusive economic zones
- 01:19:44or high seas
- 01:19:45remember china refuses to accept that
- 01:19:48there are exclusive economic zones
- 01:19:50in the south china sea within the nine
- 01:19:52dash line
- 01:19:53these naval patrols of the naval powers
- 01:19:56rebut
- 01:19:57that forcefully all this freedom of
- 01:20:00navigation
- 01:20:01of flight operations are directed at
- 01:20:04china
- 01:20:06this is not your waters these are high
- 01:20:09seas
- 01:20:10or exclusive economic zones of other
- 01:20:12coastal states
- 01:20:13and therefore we can sail here so what
- 01:20:16should we
- 01:20:17as filipinos do now we should encourage
- 01:20:20all the navies of the world to sail in
- 01:20:23the south china sea and in particular in
- 01:20:25the west philippine sea
- 01:20:27so that they will enforce the ruling
- 01:20:30also we should ask our neighbors vietnam
- 01:20:33malaysia indonesia and brunei
- 01:20:35to help us explain to the chinese people
- 01:20:38that
- 01:20:39china never had historic rights in the
- 01:20:41south china sea it's totally false
- 01:20:43and all of us in a saiyan should
- 01:20:46educate the world that china never had
- 01:20:49historic rights in the south china sea
- 01:20:51all these claims of china under the nine
- 01:20:54dash line
- 01:20:54is totally false we should continue
- 01:20:57resorting to the rule of law
- 01:20:59because we have no other choice
- 01:21:02why don't we have a choice well
- 01:21:06our constitution says we renounce war as
- 01:21:08an instrument of national policy
- 01:21:11and we cannot enforce the ruling by
- 01:21:13going to war
- 01:21:14we have to use the rule of law and also
- 01:21:17the u.n charter prohibits
- 01:21:19war as a means or use of force or threat
- 01:21:22of force
- 01:21:22as a means of settling territorial or
- 01:21:26maritime disputes
- 01:21:28war or use of force or threat of force
- 01:21:31has been outlawed under the u.n charter
- 01:21:33and under our own constitution
- 01:21:36what is the power of the president can
- 01:21:37the president declare war
- 01:21:39no he cannot even declare war the power
- 01:21:41of the president is
- 01:21:43limited to calling the armed forces in
- 01:21:45case of invasion
- 01:21:47but he cannot direct an aggression
- 01:21:49against another state it's not one of
- 01:21:51his powers
- 01:21:53only if there is an invasion can we call
- 01:21:55it the armed forces
- 01:21:57the power to declare war is lodged in
- 01:21:59congress
- 01:22:00congress by two thirds vote of both
- 01:22:02houses
- 01:22:03in joint session assembled voting
- 01:22:05separately
- 01:22:06shall have the sole power to declare the
- 01:22:09existence of a state of war
- 01:22:11that's our constitution so we must
- 01:22:14fight this battle with china we must
- 01:22:17preserve
- 01:22:18our sovereign rights in the west
- 01:22:20philippine sea through the rule of law
- 01:22:23with that i end my presentation thank
- 01:22:25you for your patience and kind attention
- South China Sea
- geopolitics
- maritime disputes
- China
- Philippines
- trade
- natural resources
- nine-dash line
- international law
- freedom of navigation