Committed to resolving South China Sea issue peacefully: Philippines

IANS  |  Manila 

The on Wednesday said it was committed to resolving the South Sea issue peacefully.

"We are firmly committed to our position for a peaceful settlement of disputes and one that is in accordance with the rule of law," Foreign Assistant Secretary Charles Jose was quoted as saying by Xinhua news agency.

and the will hold the first meeting of a bilateral consultation mechanism on the South Sea issue in May.

Jose said the bilateral consultation mechanism is significant because it will provide a venue for both and the to discuss the dispute in a peaceful manner.

He said both sides are looking forward to the May meeting.

"Both sides are discussing on the specific dates and we have no agreement yet on the substantive agenda as well as the level of the meeting. These are being discussed now," Jose said.

On Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said is willing to strengthen dialogue with the to properly manage and control divergences and advance maritime cooperation to create a favourable atmosphere for pragmatic cooperation as well as the sound and stable development of ties.

The and are among the five countries which lay claim to the energy-rich South Sea. Trade worth $5 trillion passes through the waterways of this contested region.

Manila approached the UN-appointed court in 2013 after occupied Scarborough Shoal. The court last year ruled in favour of the Philippines, rejecting China's claims on the South Sea.

--IANS

gsh/bg

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Committed to resolving South China Sea issue peacefully: Philippines

The Philippines on Wednesday said it was committed to resolving the South China Sea issue peacefully.

The on Wednesday said it was committed to resolving the South Sea issue peacefully.

"We are firmly committed to our position for a peaceful settlement of disputes and one that is in accordance with the rule of law," Foreign Assistant Secretary Charles Jose was quoted as saying by Xinhua news agency.

and the will hold the first meeting of a bilateral consultation mechanism on the South Sea issue in May.

Jose said the bilateral consultation mechanism is significant because it will provide a venue for both and the to discuss the dispute in a peaceful manner.

He said both sides are looking forward to the May meeting.

"Both sides are discussing on the specific dates and we have no agreement yet on the substantive agenda as well as the level of the meeting. These are being discussed now," Jose said.

On Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said is willing to strengthen dialogue with the to properly manage and control divergences and advance maritime cooperation to create a favourable atmosphere for pragmatic cooperation as well as the sound and stable development of ties.

The and are among the five countries which lay claim to the energy-rich South Sea. Trade worth $5 trillion passes through the waterways of this contested region.

Manila approached the UN-appointed court in 2013 after occupied Scarborough Shoal. The court last year ruled in favour of the Philippines, rejecting China's claims on the South Sea.

--IANS

gsh/bg

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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