India urges adherence to 2016 ruling favouring the Philippines in the South China Sea
- July 1, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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India urges adherence to 2016 ruling favouring the Philippines in the South China Sea
Subject : Geography
Section: Places in news
Context:
- India called for adherence to the 2016 arbitration decision in favour of the Philippines, which has been rejected by China.
Details:
- The negotiations are continuing between China and the ASEAN bloc for a code of conduct in the South China Sea — which diplomatic sources described as a “complex exercise” involving 11 countries.
Conflict over South China Sea:
- The Philippines instituted an arbitration proceeding against China in the Permanent Court of Arbitration under UNCLOS on January 22, 2013.
- The court ruled in favour of Manila on July 12, 2016, but this was rejected by China, which had called it “null and void.”
- China does not recognise the ruling and did not participate in the deliberations at The Hague.
- China, which claims rights to most of the resource-rich South China Sea up to the nine-dash line, has become more assertive in recent years.
South China Sea:
- Location: South China Sea is an arm of the western Pacific Ocean in Southeast Asia. It is south of China, east & south of Vietnam, west of the Philippines and north of the island of Borneo.
- It is connected by Taiwan Strait with the East China Sea and by Luzon Strait with the Philippine Sea.
- Bordering states & territories (clockwise from north): the People’s Republic of China, the Republic of China (Taiwan), the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam.
- Strategic Importance: This sea holds tremendous strategic importance for its location as it is the connecting link between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean (Strait of Malacca).
- According to the United Nations Conference on Trade And Development (UNCTAD) one-third of the global shipping passes through it, carrying trillions of trade which makes it a significant geopolitical water body.
Reasons For Dispute in the South China Sea:
- Contesting Claims Over Islands:
- The Paracel Islands are claimed by China, Taiwan and Vietnam.
- The Spratly Islands are claimed by China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Brunei and the Philippines.
- The Scarborough Shoal is claimed by the Philippines, China and Taiwan.
- China’s Assertion:
- Since 2010, China has been converting uninhabited islets into artificial islets to bring them under UNCLOS (examples would include Haven Reef, Johnson South Reef and Fiery Cross Reef).
- China has been changing the size and structure of the reefs by modifying their physical land features. It has also established airstrips on Parcel and Spratly.
- Chinese fishing fleets are engaged in paramilitary work on behalf of the state rather than the commercial enterprise of fishing.
- The US is very critical of this building of artificial islands and terms these actions of China as building a ‘great wall of sand’.
- Other Issues:
- The undefined geographic scope of the South China Sea.
- Disagreement over dispute settlement mechanisms.
- The undefined legal status of the Code of Conduct (COC) adds to it.
- The different histories of distant, largely uninhabited archipelagos of the sea make the matter more complicated and multifaceted.