LA CHINE ... MONTRE SES GRIFFES !
Eh oui, le Dragon a décidé de montrer ses griffes.
Pourquoi ?
Il ne faut pas se faire d’illusions, les bateaux de pêche ‘’chinois’’
obéissent aux ordres, ce n’est pas de leur propre initiative qu’ils sont venus
pêcher dans cette zone âprement disputée.
Si l’on ajoute que, par le plus grand des hasards, deux navires de guerre
au drapeau rouge se trouvaient dans les environs immédiats … il n’y a pas de
doute possible, c’est de la provocation.
Pourquoi ?
Il faut savoir que le Cambodge assume à l’heure actuelle la présidence
tournante de l’ASEAN.
Le Cambodge est devenu ce que je nommerai un vassal de la Chine.
Cette dernière souhaitant un règlement global de la ‘’crise des îles’’,
elle profite du fait que le Cambodge occupe la présidence de l’ASEAN, pour pousser à un réglement pays par pays et non pas à un réglement avec l'ensemble des membres de l'association.
Plus particulièrement, Brunei, la Malaisie, les Philippines et le Vietnam.
Taïwan qui revendique également un certain nombre d’îles ne fait pas partie de
l’Asean.
The
Philippines deployed a second vessel to tiny islands in the South China Sea on
Thursday in a bid to protect its sovereignty in an increasingly tense
territorial standoff with China.
Authorities
said a coast guard boat joined the Philippines' biggest warship at Scarborough
Shoal, where two Chinese surveillance vessels were protecting a group of
Chinese fishermen from being arrested.
"It has
arrived in the area. It is there to support our navy and to show our
flag," foreign affairs department spokesman Raul Hernandez told reporters,
referring to the 56-metre-long (184-foot) search and rescue coast guard vessel.
"It is
mandated to protect our seas."
However
Hernandez also emphasised the Philippines was intent on ending the standoff
peacefully, and quickly.
"We are
confident the two sides will find a diplomatic solution as they are committed
to finding one," he said.
"We want
this to be resolved immediately. Our people are there, the Chinese fishermen
are there. It is hot and they could run out of food so we want this to be
resolved as soon as possible."
The dispute
began on Sunday when Philippine authorities found eight Chinese fishing boats
at the shoal, a group of tiny islands and reefs 124 nautical miles west of the
country's main island of Luzon.
The
Philippines accused the fishermen of being there illegally, asserting the area
was Philippine territory because it was within the country's 200-nautical-mile
exclusive economic zone, as recognised by international law.
However China
claims all of the South China Sea as its own, even waters up to the coasts of
other countries, and Chinese authorities insisted the fishermen were allowed to
be at the shoal.
Competing
claims to the South China Sea have long been regarded as one of Asia's
potential flashpoints for military conflict.
Aside from
the Philippines and China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei also have
competing claims to the waters.
More than 70
Vietnamese sailors were killed in 1988 when China and Vietnam battled for
control of the Spratlys, an archipelago south of Scarborough Shoal.
The sea holds
huge economic and political significance, as it is believed to sit atop vast
oil and gas resources, is home to vast fishing grounds and hosts shipping lanes
that carry a third of the globe's maritime trade.
In the latest
flare-up in tensions, the Philippines deployed its navy flagship vessel to
Scarborough Shoal immediately after the Chinese fishermen were discovered
there.
But the two
Chinese surveillance vessels appeared on the scene on Tuesday and blocked the
Philippine warship from arresting the fishermen, who had reportedly hauled in
corals, live sharks and some endangered species.
"For us,
this is illegal fishing, illegal poaching and that is why our navy is there to
protect our sovereignty and assert our rights," Hernandez said.
The Chinese
embassy in Manila released a statement on Wednesday insisting the waters
belonged to China and ordering the Philippine warship to leave immediately.
In Beijing,
foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin accused the Philippines of
"harassing" the Chinese fishermen and said a protest had been lodged.
"We urge
the Philippine side... not to make new troubles and create conditions for the
friendly relations of the two countries," Liu said.
The
Philippines and Vietnam complained last year of increasingly aggressive acts by
China in staking its claim to the South China Sea.
The
Philippines accused Chinese vessels of firing warning shots at Filipino
fishermen, as well as harassing an oil exploration vessel and placing markers
on islets within Philippine territory.
However this
week's standoff is the highest-profile in recent years.
Vous pouvez me retrouver, en français :
<
www.frenchlivinginthephilippines.blogspot.com >
Mon petit livre “101 façons de Générer des Revenus aux Philippines, pour y
vivre’’ est maintenant disponible.
Vous trouverez plus d’information sur la page ‘’Livres’’
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