By Jerry E. Esplanada
China Daily/Asia News Network
Tuesday, Jul 24, 2012
One
of China's top newspapers has urged Beijing to stop giving development
aid to the Philippines, which it says "does not deserve too much
attention from China."
The Global Times, in an editorial on July 19, said "there is no need to dole out generous aid" to the Philippines.
"The cooperative project should be an opportunity for China to
extend its advantage," the paper, published by the Communist Party
mouthpiece, the People's Daily, said.
"Cooperation with the Philippines can still continue only if it
benefits China," the paper said. "But countries as fickle as the
Philippines cannot become our strategic partner in a short period of
time."
Citing a Philippine dam project funded with a US$112-million (S$140
million) loan from China and inaugurated recently by President Aquino,
it said: "The water supply project contract was signed in 2010."
"If it were negotiated today, given the current situation
surrounding Huangyan Island [Panatag or Scarborough Shoal in the West
Philippine or South China Sea], the deal would likely not go through,"
the paper said.
According to the Global Times, when President Benigno Aquino
"attended the ceremony, where he expressed his gratitude to China [for
funding a water project in Manila], the news sparked strong opposition
back in China."
The paper explained: "Some thought it was a free donation to Manila and questioned the logic behind it.
The water supply project was built through the preferential buyer's credit of the China Export-Import Bank.
The Philippines borrowed from China to purchase construction
products from a Chinese company, China International Water and Electric
Corp. The US$112 million is underwritten by the Philippine government."
Suffer consequences
The Global Times wants China to punish the Philippines for daring to
contest the ownership of Panatag Shoal. "Manila provoked the conflict
and also suffered the consequences," the paper said.
It claimed: "The Philippines grabbed a few islands in the South
China Sea during the years when China's naval power was weaker. It was
a grim lesson for China. With its rising influence and time on its
side, China can generally be sure of resolving the South China Sea
issue at its own pace despite disruptions from the US."
Earlier, the Global Times criticized the Philippines and Vietnam for
their "attempt to grab islands and waters in the South China Sea, which
don't belong to them, by riding the back of the tiger," an apparent
reference to the United States.
In a report published on July 16, the paper said Manila and Hanoi
"hope to get massive military assistance from the US, which the US
can't afford to provide."
The report, titled "Clinton's trip highlights weak points of US
return to Asia," noted that US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton "made
a trip encircling China recently."
"From Japan to Mongolia then to Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, Clinton
mainly focused on three things: Backing Japan, Vietnam and the
Philippines in disputes with China over maritime territorial
sovereignty; balancing China's economic influence in Asia by enhancing
trade and economic ties with Southeast Asian countries, and promoting
support for democracy and human rights as the core of US Asian strategy
while attacking China's development model," the report said.
It added: "The Obama administration's strategy covers political and
military fields, as well as trade and economy. But the strategy is
gradually losing its edge."
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