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Trojan Horse in the West Philippine Sea

By: Florin T. Hilbay - @inquirerdotnet


12:06 AM May 30, 2017

In the recently concluded Belt and Road Forum in Beijing, the special envoy for intercultural
dialogue Jose de Venecia Jr. revived proposals for joint oil and gas exploration in the West
Philippine Sea, citing the joint seismic marine undertaking among the Philippines, China and
Vietnam during the term of President Gloria Arroyo as a model for cooperation. He said “[i]t is
obvious as members of the Asean family that today, with China, we must find ways and means to
jointly develop the area’s
hydrocarbon potential to help lessen our common dependence on distant petroleum sources in
the Middle East.”

The government must exercise utmost caution and tread very carefully on this matter, for the
protection of the national interest.
Prior to Philippines v. China, the idea of joint exploration and development in the WPS may have
had some plausible justification on the ground that the rights of the Philippines and China in our
exclusive economic zone were theoretically contested. After that decision, such plausible
deniability is no longer tenable. Simply put, joint exploration and development are incompatible
with the Constitution.

The arbitral award declared that the Philippines does not share with China any overlapping
entitlements. In the language of our Constitution, areas in the WPS believed to contain oil and
gas, such as Reed Bank, are part of our “marine wealth” and the State must “reserve [their] use
and enjoyment exclusively to Filipino citizens.” Because they “are owned by the State,” their
“exploration, development, and utilization … shall be under the full control and supervision of the
State.”

What this means is that any joint agreement to explore, develop, and utilize our marine wealth
with China is null and void. Such agreements effectively impair the authority of the State to control
and supervise the use and enjoyment of our marine wealth through its institutional machineries—
the executive, legislative and judicial branches. They also materially diminish the rights of Filipinos
to the benefits arising from such resources. We cannot, for example, compel China to submit to
the Commission on Audit and/or pay income or franchise taxes for its share in the income—forms
of control sovereigns traditionally impose.
The most insidious aspect of a joint agreement with China is the fact that the basis of such
economic sharing is the recognition of China’s sovereign rights over our exclusive economic
zone—a culpable violation of the Constitution and an implied waiver of our victory at The Hague.

The Duterte administration must realize that whatever economic gains there may be from any joint
agreement with China over the WPS can only be made at the expense of giving away our
sovereign rights over the area. Joint agreements are a Trojan Horse against our country’s
continuing efforts to effectively assert the rights we have won at The Hague.
Lest anyone forget, China is bound by that judgment because it is a party to the UN Convention
on the Law of the Sea. We must construe its present refusal to abide by that judgment as a
strategic effort on its part to buy time as it attempts to secure a waiver of judgment—express or
implied—from any post-Aquino administration.

In response to criticisms that President Duterte has been timid on the matter of enforcing the
Philippines’ rights against China, he recently revealed that he had previously informed Xi Jinping
of his intention to drill oil in our EEZ, but was threatened with war. He seems to imply, in the
balance of his remarks, that he does not intend to go to war with China over oil.
This is, of course, well and good, insofar as practical politics goes. But one also hopes that such a
pacifist line is not later transformed into a pragmatic justification for entering into an
unconstitutional and inequitable joint agreement over the WPS that simultaneously waives our
sovereign rights.

Florin T. Hilbay is a former solicitor general. He was agent to the Republic in Philippines v. China.

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