August 14, 2012
By Amando Doronila, MANILA,
Philippine Daily Inquirer/Asia News Network
The abrupt recall last month of
Cambodian Ambassador Hos Sereythonh from Manila a year short of his
three-year posting left shockwaves in the capitals of 10 Southeast
Asian nations and sparked speculation on whether the Philippines and
Cambodia had plunged into a serious diplomatic crisis, perhaps even on
the brink of war.
According to diplomatic
practices, envoys are relieved after an outrageous breach of protocol
involving civilized states, which then require urgent steps to avert
armed conflict.
That was not the case when Foreign Secretary
Albert del Rosario made a surprise announcement to the press last week
that the Cambodian foreign ministry had sent him a letter announcing
that Sereythonh had been recalled and would not be able to complete his
term that was supposed to end on July 27, 2013. The letter did not give
any explanation for the relief.
Last month, Del Rosario summoned
Sereythonh to explain comments to a Manila newspaper blaming the
Philippines and Vietnam for trying to “sabotage and hijack” the 45th
ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) ministerial conference,
hosted by Cambodia in Phnom Penh.
The ambassador, who accused the Philippines and Vietnam of engaging in “dirty tricks,” did not show up, claiming illness.
A Philippine official has claimed that during the ASEAN meeting, the
Cambodian chair rejected at least five drafts of a joint statement that
would have addressed the maritime row with China over the West
Philippine Sea (South China Sea). China claims blanket sovereignty over
all of the sea, but Taiwan and ASEAN members the Philippines, Vietnam,
Malaysia and Brunei have overlapping claims to the area.
The
Philippine-Cambodian row flared when ASEAN failed to issue a joint
statement at the Phnom Penh meeting after Cambodia — perceived as an
ally of China — blocked moves by the Philippines to mention the
standoff between the Philippines and China at Scarborough Shoal (known
by the Philippines as Panatag Shoal) in the proposed communique.
Vietnam also wanted to include China's incursions into its waters in
the proposed communique.
Complicating matters, Foreign
Undersecretary Erlinda Basilio issued a public statement saying that
ASEAN failed to come up with a joint statement because of Cambodia's
firm position to not reflect the recent developments in the West
Philippine Sea, despite the view of the majority in the ASEAN meeting
that these events impinge on the overall security of the region. By
implication, this majority view seems to hold that ASEAN swept these
developments under the carpet because China objected to this step.
In response, the Cambodian ambassador sent a letter to the Philippine
Star, accusing the Philippines and Vietnam of “sabotaging” the ASEAN
official statement that shut its eyes to the aggressive Chinese
incursions in the disputed areas, and engaging in “dirty tricks” —
strong language to use in diplomacy.
It is not clear whether in
summoning the ambassador to explain his letter to the newspaper the
Department of Foreign Affairs considered the envoy to be persona non
grata to justify his relief. What seems clear is that the ASEAN meeting
ended fractured over the issue on the standoff at Scarborough Shoal and
the Spratly Islands.
In the Phnom Penh meeting, the most
contentious issue boiled down to the standoff at Scarborough Shoal,
where fleets of Chinese fishing vessels, escorted by armed maritime
ships, have swarmed the lagoons to trawl marine life and resources,
while the smaller Philippine Coast Guard vessels stood by helplessly,
unable to stop the pillage of Philippine marine resources.
During the past few months of the expansive incursions of Chinese
expeditions, the encounters between the Chinese predators and
Philippine and Vietnamese maritime authorities have increased
correspondingly.
The Philippines and Vietnam have accordingly
borne the brunt of these creeping penetrations of what they claim are
their sovereign territories by Chinese maritime expeditions. Among the
rival claimants on territories in the West Philippine Sea, they are the
only two that have stood up to the Chinese expansive penetrations and
blandishments.
The recent encounters have caused the think tank
International Crisis Group to warn that tensions over competing claims
in the West Philippine Sea could escalate into conflict, with arms
buildup among the rival nations raising the temperature.
Prospects of solving the disputes “seem disturbing” after the recent
failure by ASEAN to hammer out a “code of conduct” that would govern
actions while at sea.
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