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International law dishonored by illegal award on South China Sea arbitration: Chinese diplomat
                 Source: Xinhua | 2016-07-13 01:07:17 | Editor: huaxia

by Xinhua Writers Gan Chuan, Shuai Rong

THE HAGUE, July 12 (Xinhua) -- The ruling on the South China Sea arbitration issued by a court in The Hague is a disgrace to international law, Chinese Ambassador to the Netherlands Wu Ken told the press on Tuesday.

"Today is a 'black Tuesday' for The Hague, 'the capital of international law'," Wu commented.

"China is deeply dissatisfied and firmly rejects this ruling which dishonors international law and damages regional stability," he said.

On Tuesday, the tribunal set up at the request of the former Philippine administration of President Benigno S. Aquino III sweepingly sided with the Philippines' claims.

Wu said the new Philippine government should understand what damages its predecessor has done to bilateral relations and the interests of the Philippines itself.

"They should abandon the delusion of having the issue resolved through the intervention of external forces, clean up the negativity left by the illegal arbitration, and return to the bilateral and regional consensus of settling disputes through negotiations," he said.

The ambassador also called on "certain countries who do not belong to this region" to give up the thought of containing China by using the dispute as a pretext.

"They should stop sabre rattling and fabricating disputes and leave room for a calm negotiation table in our region," said the Chinese diplomat.

Wu reiterated that the ad hoc arbitral tribunal delivered a null and void award on issues linked to territorial sovereignty and maritime delimitation, which exceed the provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

The arbitration handled a case outside its jurisdiction and is "a legal monstrosity," said Wu.

"Just like a roll of wastepaper, the ruling has no legal meaning for the settlement of disputes in the South China Sea. What's worse, it severely undermined the integrity and dignity of the UNCLOS," he added.

On the tribunal's ruling on the nine-dash line outlining Chinese territory in the South China Sea, Wu explained that historical rights are not governed by the convention and China's dotted line came into being dozens of years before the creation of UNCLOS. "But the tribunal erroneously applied the Convention to draw unfounded conclusions on China's historical rights and the dotted line."

China's historical rights within the dotted line in the SCS will not under any circumstances be affected by this ruling, he stressed.

Wu also told the press that an increasing number of non-Chinese scholars noted that this arbitration case violated the principle of state consent, which is detrimental to the international rule of law. More and more states have voiced their opposition to ultra vires jurisdiction in favor of settling disputes through negotiation and consultation.

"However, certain countries obsessed with a Cold War mentality still attempt to use the South China Sea issue as a pawn to contain China and to boost their own military presence in the Asia-Pacific region," said Wu.

"A piece of cloud can not cover up the sun. This political farce can by no means deny the sound historical facts and legal evidence supporting China's sovereignty over islands in the Sea," he added.

Wu reiterated that negotiation and consultation are the primary means to settle disputes under the United Nations Charter and UNCLOS, and remain the most effective method under international law.

"China has both the legal basis and the ability to recover islands and reefs illegally occupied by other countries. Nevertheless, in a bid to safeguard peace and stability in the region, we have always sought for a peaceful settlement of disputes and upheld maritime cooperation with maximum restraint," Wu said.

The ambassador reiterated that the arbitration farce will not weaken China's determination to defend its national interests. "It will not change China's foreign policy for a friendly neighborhood," he said, "or China's patience and sincerity in peacefully resolving disputes through direct negotiations."

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International law dishonored by illegal award on South China Sea arbitration: Chinese diplomat

Source: Xinhua 2016-07-13 01:07:17

by Xinhua Writers Gan Chuan, Shuai Rong

THE HAGUE, July 12 (Xinhua) -- The ruling on the South China Sea arbitration issued by a court in The Hague is a disgrace to international law, Chinese Ambassador to the Netherlands Wu Ken told the press on Tuesday.

"Today is a 'black Tuesday' for The Hague, 'the capital of international law'," Wu commented.

"China is deeply dissatisfied and firmly rejects this ruling which dishonors international law and damages regional stability," he said.

On Tuesday, the tribunal set up at the request of the former Philippine administration of President Benigno S. Aquino III sweepingly sided with the Philippines' claims.

Wu said the new Philippine government should understand what damages its predecessor has done to bilateral relations and the interests of the Philippines itself.

"They should abandon the delusion of having the issue resolved through the intervention of external forces, clean up the negativity left by the illegal arbitration, and return to the bilateral and regional consensus of settling disputes through negotiations," he said.

The ambassador also called on "certain countries who do not belong to this region" to give up the thought of containing China by using the dispute as a pretext.

"They should stop sabre rattling and fabricating disputes and leave room for a calm negotiation table in our region," said the Chinese diplomat.

Wu reiterated that the ad hoc arbitral tribunal delivered a null and void award on issues linked to territorial sovereignty and maritime delimitation, which exceed the provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

The arbitration handled a case outside its jurisdiction and is "a legal monstrosity," said Wu.

"Just like a roll of wastepaper, the ruling has no legal meaning for the settlement of disputes in the South China Sea. What's worse, it severely undermined the integrity and dignity of the UNCLOS," he added.

On the tribunal's ruling on the nine-dash line outlining Chinese territory in the South China Sea, Wu explained that historical rights are not governed by the convention and China's dotted line came into being dozens of years before the creation of UNCLOS. "But the tribunal erroneously applied the Convention to draw unfounded conclusions on China's historical rights and the dotted line."

China's historical rights within the dotted line in the SCS will not under any circumstances be affected by this ruling, he stressed.

Wu also told the press that an increasing number of non-Chinese scholars noted that this arbitration case violated the principle of state consent, which is detrimental to the international rule of law. More and more states have voiced their opposition to ultra vires jurisdiction in favor of settling disputes through negotiation and consultation.

"However, certain countries obsessed with a Cold War mentality still attempt to use the South China Sea issue as a pawn to contain China and to boost their own military presence in the Asia-Pacific region," said Wu.

"A piece of cloud can not cover up the sun. This political farce can by no means deny the sound historical facts and legal evidence supporting China's sovereignty over islands in the Sea," he added.

Wu reiterated that negotiation and consultation are the primary means to settle disputes under the United Nations Charter and UNCLOS, and remain the most effective method under international law.

"China has both the legal basis and the ability to recover islands and reefs illegally occupied by other countries. Nevertheless, in a bid to safeguard peace and stability in the region, we have always sought for a peaceful settlement of disputes and upheld maritime cooperation with maximum restraint," Wu said.

The ambassador reiterated that the arbitration farce will not weaken China's determination to defend its national interests. "It will not change China's foreign policy for a friendly neighborhood," he said, "or China's patience and sincerity in peacefully resolving disputes through direct negotiations."

Related:

Spotlight: Ill-founded award on South China Sea arbitration draws worldwide criticism

THE HAGUE, July 12 (Xinhua) -- An arbitral tribunal on the South China Sea rendered ruling on Tuesday, resulting in a deluge of criticism from China and other countries.

The 479-page award issued by a five-member tribunal is sweepingly in favor of the claims filed by the administration of former Philippine President Benigno S. Aquino III, which unilaterally lodged the arbitration.  Full story

Spotlight: Law-abusing tribunal issues ill-founded award on South China Sea arbitration, draws worldwide criticism

THE HAGUE, July 12 (Xinhua) -- The tribunal handling the South China Sea arbitration case unilaterally initiated by the former Philippine government issued its final award on Tuesday, sweepingly siding with Manila's cunningly packaged claims.

The process and outcome of the three-year-long arbitration have drawn criticism from dozens of countries and numerous experts across the world, who pointed out that the panel has no jurisdiction and its decision is naturally null and void. Full story

Chinese foreign minister says South China Sea arbitration a political farce

BEIJING, July 12 (Xinhua) -- The South China Sea arbitration, unilaterally initiated by the Philippines, is a political farce made under the pretext of law, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Tuesday.

Wang made the remarks after an Arbitral Tribunal handling the South China Sea arbitration case issued its final award on Tuesday.  Full story

China refutes U.S. statement on South China Sea arbitration award

BEIJING, July 12 (Xinhua) -- China is strongly displeased with a press statement issued by the Spokesperson of the U.S. State Department on Tuesday on the award issued by the South China Sea arbitration tribunal unilaterally initiated by the former Philippine government.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lu Kang said in a statement that China is firmly opposed to the U.S. statement and has lodged solemn representations with the U.S. side.  Full story

China asks Japan to stop interfering in South China Sea

BEIJING, July 12 (Xinhua) -- China has asked Japan to stop interfering in the South China Sea issue, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said Tuesday.

China hopes Japan will bear in mind the terms of China-Japan relations and of regional peace and stability, and reflect on its position on South China Sea disputes, Lu Kang said.  Full story

China resolved to defend territorial sovereignty, maritime interests: People's Daily

BEIJING, July 12 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese people are resolved to defend the country's territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests in the South China Sea, said the People's Daily in a commentary to be carried on Wednesday.

The tribunal handling the South China Sea arbitration case issued its award on Tuesday, amid a global chorus that the panel has no jurisdiction. Full story

Commentary: South China Sea arbitration a scar on international legal system

BEIJING, July 12 (Xinhua) -- Much like a poisoned tree, which will never bear good fruit, the award issued in the South China Sea arbitration was contaminated from the start.

A belligerent claimant, a biased arbitrator and an absence of rationality: Hardly fertile ground for impartiality.  Full story

[Editor: huaxia ]
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