Ma reaffirms ROC stance on Taiping Island
2016/03/28
ROC President Ma Ying-jeou said March 23 that Taiping Island is an island from all perspectives, and claims by the Philippines government in an international arbitration tribunal that it is a rock are groundless and without merit.
“Taiping Island can sustain human habitation, has an economic life of its own and fully meets the definition of an island as laid out in Article 121 of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea,” Ma said.
“In addition to 12 nautical miles of territorial waters, the ROC is entitled to claim a 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone and a continental shelf.”
The president made the remarks while addressing members of the international media at ROC Air Force Songshan Base Command upon their return from a one-day trip to Taiping Island in the South China Sea arranged by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
According to Ma, Taiping Island possesses rich natural resources such as fertile soil, fresh water and diverse flora and fauna, with documented history of human activity dating from centuries ago.
Taiping Island has been administered by the ROC since 1956, and recent efforts by the government developing it into an island for peace and rescue operations are in accordance with international norms and regulations.
“These efforts will not raise tensions, and the ROC experience on Taiping Island can be said to be a model for the South China Sea, well worth the attention of the international media,” Ma said.
In order to reaffirm these indisputable facts about Taiping Island’s legal status, Taipei City-based Chinese Society of International Law submitted an amicus curiae brief March 23 to the arbitration tribunal, rebutting the Philippines’ statements about Taiping Island.
The president also formally invited the Philippines government to send representatives to tour the island, and welcomes the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague to perform a site visit.
Ma said he proposed the South China Sea Peace Initiative in May 2015 as a solution to the gridlock in the region as it promotes the sharing of resources while resolving disputes.
“The East China Sea Peace Initiative I proposed in August 2012 is testament to the success of this cooperative approach,” he added.
Source: Taiwan Today (http://taiwantoday.tw/ct.asp?xItem=243234&ctNode=2194&mp=9)