Spokesperson: Vietnam welcomes countries’ stance on South China Sea (Bien Dong Sea) in line with int’l law

Vietnam welcomes other countries’ stance on the South China Sea (Bien Dong Sea) issue that conforms with international law.
October 02, 2020 | 08:55
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Vietnamese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Le Thi Thu Hang. Photo: VNA

Vietnam welcomes other countries’ stance on the South China Sea (Bien Dong Sea) issue that conforms with international law, Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Le Thi Thu Hang said on October 1.

She made the statement in response to a question from a reporter about Vietnam’s view on a joint note sent by the UK, France, and Germany to the UN on September 16.

Vietnam holds that all countries share the common aspiration and target of maintaining and promoting peace, stability, cooperation, and development in the Bien Dong Sea. To that end, respecting legal order at sea and enforcing the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea 1982 (UNCLOS) in an adequate and responsible manner and in good faith is crucial,” Hang said.

According to the Spokesperson, Vietnam shares the viewpoints as stated in the 36th ASEAN Summit’s declaration and the 53rd ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting’s joint communiqué that UNCLOS is the legal framework regulating all activities in seas and oceans.

In this spirit, Vietnam, together with other ASEAN member states, hopes that all countries, including ASEAN’s partners, will make all-out efforts to maintain peace, stability, and cooperation in the South China Sea and handle disputes through dialogue and peaceful measures in accordance with international law, for the common interests and aspirations of regional countries as well as the international community, Hang stressed.

Once again, I want to affirm that Vietnam always contributes actively and responsibly to this process,” she said.

Philippine Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. has recently said that his country will try to complete the second negotiation round over the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea (COC) before passing on its role as Coordinator of China-ASEAN Dialogue Relations this year.

In this regard, Hang said that the resumption of COC talks following their suspension due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is a priority of ASEAN member states and China.

Vietnam hopes to, together with relevant parties, resume talks in order to soon reach a result-oriented COC that matches international law and UNCLOS, the Spokesperson emphasised.

Note verbale presented by France, Germany, UK

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In a note verbale submitted on Sept. 16 to the UN, France, Germany and the UK underlined the importance of unhampered exercise of the freedom of the high seas, in particular the freedom of navigation and overflight, and of the right of innocent passage enshrined in UNCLOS, including in the South China Sea. Google Earth, File

France, Germany, and the UK have expressed their opposition to China’s expansive claims in the South China Sea (called Bien Dong Sea in Vietnam) in a note verbale addressed to the United Nations (UN) on September 16.

In their submission, the three European powers recalled the universal and unified character of the 1982 UNCLOS that sets out the legal framework within which all activities in the oceans and seas must be carried out.

They underscored that the integrity of the Convention needs to be maintained, as reaffirmed by the United Nations General Assembly in its annual resolution on oceans and the law of the sea.

The countries also underlined the importance of unhampered exercise of the freedom of the high seas, in particular the freedom of navigation and overflight, and of the right of innocent passage enshrined in UNCLOS, including in the South China Sea.

They emphasised the specific and exhaustive conditions set forth in the Convention for the application of straight and archipelagic baselines which are defined in Part II and Part IV of UNCLOS.

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The note verbale addressed to the United Nations on September 16

Therefore, they said, there is no legal ground for continental States to treat archipelagos or marine features as a whole entity without respecting the relevant provisions in Part II of UNCLOS or by using those in Part IV applicable only to archipelagic States.

Land building activities or other forms of artificial transformation cannot change the classification of a feature under UNCLOS.

Claims with regard to the exercise of “historic rights” over the South China Sea waters do not comply with international law and UNCLOS provisions, they stressed, adding that the arbitral award in the Philippines v. China case dating to July 12, 2016 clearly confirms this point.

They held that all maritime claims in the South China Sea should be made and peacefully resolved in accordance with the principles and rules of UNCLOS and the means and procedures for the settlement of disputes provided for in the Convention.

This position is reaffirmed without prejudice to competing claims of coastal states over disputed territorial sovereignty to naturally formed land features and to areas of the continental shelf in the South China Sea on which France, Germany and the UK take no position, the countries said.

This joint Note Verbale reflects our long-standing legal positions and is complementary and without prejudice to any further positions that France, Germany and the United Kingdom have stated in the past, both bilaterally and together with other States Parties to UNCLOS.”

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Royal Navy warship HMS Argyll joined the US Navy for combined workout in the South China Sea in January 2019. Photo: US Navy

As states parties to UNCLOS, they vowed to continue to uphold and assert their rights and freedoms as enshrined in UNCLOS and to contribute to promoting co-operation in the region as set out under the Convention.

The European countries’ latest statement comes after the US stepped up its pressure against China, signaling what many analysts view as a looming Cold War between Washington and Beijing.

France, the UK, and Germany’s position also followed recent high-profile virtual meetings between Europe and China, where European countries took increasingly tougher stance in their China policy.

Retired Philippine Supreme Court justice Antonio Carpio and internationally-renowned lawyer Paul Reichler had pointed out that the effort of countries to invoke the ruling and call out China’s expansive claims was one of the best ways to enforce the landmark 2016 Hague ruling, Rappler said./.

China claims almost all of the South China Sea based on a so-called nine-dash line.

In a landmark ruling on July 12, 2016, The Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration found no legal basis for China to claim historic rights to a “nine-dash line” in the South China Sea and that Beijing had breached the sovereign rights of the Philippines, which brought the case.

China, however, has opposed and refused to honor the tribunal ruling, according to Philstar.

Beijing has likewise refused to accept any proposal or action based on the arbitral tribunal decision, calling the ruling junking its claims to historic sea rights as illegal and invalid./.

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