Filipinos in South Korea

American Lawyer to face illegal China in behalf of the Philippines, Vietnam, Borneo ‘till 2014

Lawyer Paul Reichler points to the area in dispute on a map of South China Sea in his office in Washington, D.C [Melissa Golden for The Wall Street Journal]

Philippines Takes China's Sea Claims to Court

A Washington Lawyer Helps Manila Challenge Beijing's Sea Claims

Paul Reichler, a Washington-based lawyer, has spent much of his career representing small countries against big ones: Nicaragua versus the U.S.; Georgia versus Russia; Mauritius versus the U.K., Bangladesh versus India.

His first big victory made headlines in the 1980s when the International Court of Justice in The Hague ruled that U.S. support for Contra rebels trying to overthrow the left-wing Sandinista government of Nicaragua violated international law.

That's one reason to pay attention to the case he launched this year at a United Nations arbitration body: the Philippines versus China.

Lawyer Paul Reichler, who specializes in international public law, is taking China to court on behalf of the Philippines over a dispute in the South China Sea.  [Melissa Golden for The Wall Street Journal]

Mr. Reichler is the lead lawyer representing Manila in its legal challenge against China's claim to almost all of the South China Sea, signified by the "nine-dash line"-a U-shaped protrusion on Chinese maps that brushes the coastlines of smaller states, including the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam.

The Philippines brought the case in January under the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which governs the world's oceans. China is a signatory. The heart of the case is that the line has no basis under the U.N. convention, which states that coastal states are entitled to a territorial sea extending 12 nautical miles as well as a 200-mile economic exclusion zone in which they have rights to fish and extract undersea resources.

"Of course we're aware of the enormity of taking on a country like China. We'd be foolish not to" be aware, says Mr. Reichler, a litigator with the U.S. law firm Foley Hoag.

The Arbitral Tribunal has appointed a five-person panel of judges and issued a timetable for handling the case, including a deadline for the Philippines to submit its evidence by March 30 next year.

It's the first time that Beijing has been taken to a U.N. tribunal and China is furious. Most recently, it showed its displeasure by making clear that Philippine President Benigno Aquino III wouldn't be welcome at a trade event in southern China in August. The Chinese Foreign Ministry didn't respond to requests for comment on the arbitration action. But Beijing has said it will ignore the legal proceedings, without giving any reasons.

China insists that territorial disputes over islands in the South China Sea should be settled through bilateral negotiation under its frequently stated principle of "shelving disputes and going in for joint development." The sea contains potentially vast reserves of oil and natural gas. In addition, Beijing maintains that the nine-dash line presents no obstacle to freedom of navigation in a stretch of water that carries a third of global trade—a major U.S. concern.

Beijing's refusal to participate hasn't stopped the case going ahead. It could even speed its resolution: Mr. Reichler says that if China doesn't take part, the case could wrap up by the end of 2014. Such cases can otherwise drag on for up to five years.

To some skeptics, Manila's challenge is quixotic. Even if the tribunal decides it has jurisdiction over the case, and then finds in Manila's favor, Beijing could simply ignore the verdict.

Yet there are more than legal considerations at stake. The case is also significant for what it will signify about the way that China views the world.

China's self-image is wrapped up in its own sense of victimhood at the hands of imperialist powers led by Britain starting in the mid-19th century. That, in turn, has driven a Chinese foreign policy that professes to treat all countries equally, large or small, rich or poor.

But now that China is a global player, and dominates its own backyard, neighbors are asking anxious questions. Will it seek to work within existing international laws, or try to bend them to suit its purposes? As it acquires a blue-water navy to project power far from its own shores, will it be more tempted to use force to settle territorial disputes? And how will it treat smaller countries, like the Philippines, that feel bullied by China's growing military might?

Mr. Reichler is counting on international opinion to sway China's response toward any judgment that doesn't go China's way. "It's a terrible blow to a state's prestige to defy a tribunal's decision," he says.

From the Philippines' point of view, legal action was the last option after diplomacy failed. China wouldn't budge from its claim to "indisputable sovereignty" over the whole sea, say officials in Manila, and it was steadily encroaching on Philippine territory. Last year, Chinese ships fenced off the Scarborough Shoal, a fishermen's haven just west of Manila. China says the Philippines navy was harassing Chinese fishermen.

Manila conducted a global search for legal counsel before settling on Mr. Reichler. "We wanted the best," says one high-placed Philippine official.

China uses history to support its claims to the South China Sea and all its land features. These date back to its own imperial days centuries ago, when China treated its neighbors as mere vassals. However, the nine-dash line itself was first published on a map in 1947 by the Chinese Kuomintang government, and the Communists inherited it after the civil war that brought the Communists, led by Chairman Mao, to power.

The line extends almost to Indonesia, some 900 miles from China's southernmost territory, Hainan Island. Such a far-reaching claim has no parallel anywhere in the world.

As for the islands, rocks and reefs that fall within the line, Mr. Reichler makes a technical argument in the Philippines' case. The convention rules that a habitable island is entitled to a 200-mile economic exclusion zone. A rock that juts out of the sea gets 12 miles. A semisubmerged reef gets nothing.

Mr. Reichler's argument is that all the sea features that the Philippines disputes with China are either rocks or reefs. And, therefore, even if China owns them, it has only limited rights to the surrounding resources.

His legal team is pulling together a massive document to support that contention consisting of aerial photographs, naval charts, hydrology reports and geographical findings. "I'm not in a position to say how China will react," he says. "My job is to say [to the Philippines]: 'This is a good case for you to win or not.'"

Write to Andrew Browne at andrew.browne@wsj.com

Wall Street Journa

Powerful show of force of INC's outreach shut down Philippine Capital - a political message to the PORK in the Government?

Iglesia ni Cristo's 1.5 to 2 Million show of Force shut down Manila. Photo from Inquirer

Iglesia ni Cristo (Church of Christ) a Philippine founded religious group, Christian sect causes traffic chaos as more than 1.5 million people bring together in Philippine capital - Manila.

More than 1.5 million people converged on the Philippine capital on Monday for a powerful Christian sect's evangelical event, causing traffic chaos that shut down large parts of the megacity.

The gathering of the secretive and politically influential Iglesia ni Cristo (Church of Christ) in the historic district of Manila forced all schools and some government offices to close.

The Supreme Court was also suspended, as were some basketball games in the highly popular college league, while Manila's governing authority urged private employers to give their staff a paid day off to avoid the traffic.

"We really apologise for those who were inconvenienced. Maybe they can just pass this off as a minor sacrifice to help their countrymen," Iglesia ni Cristo spokesman Edwin Zaballa said.

Iglesia ni Cristo, which is believed to have about three million members, held the event ostensibly as a medical and charity mission, with its followers giving aid to residents of huge slums.

Zaballa said it was also part of year-long celebrations across the country to mark the lead-up to its centenary next year, and "to spread the word".

Between two and three million people attended the event, according to Manila's police chief, Isagani Genade, while the organisers estimated the crowd at between 1.5 million and two million people.

The event is one of many ostentatious displays of faith in the mainly Catholic Philippines, where religious leaders also wield heavy political influence.

However, not everyone attending was celebrating.

Volunteer-members of the Christian sect the Iglesia Ni Cristo (Church of Christ), prepare to distribute food supplies to the indigent in Manila, Philippines, on Monday. Photo: AP

In a square fronting Manila's central post office, tempers frayed during the fierce afternoon heat as men, women and children jostled while waiting for medical care offered by the group.

"This is madness. I have been here since dawn to get a free medical check-up, but I will get more sick in this heat," said factory worker Flor Kato, a 40-year-old mother of five who was complaining of chest pains.

Several others fainted due to the heat, while others simply gave up in frustration.

Founded by Felix Manalo in 1914, Iglesia ni Cristo exerts huge political influence in the Philippines despite being outnumbered by the country's more than 75 million Catholics.

Its followers are instructed to vote as a bloc, so politicians often seek their leaders' anointment during election season.

Its teachings are more conservative than the Catholic Church, with its followers not allowed to marry non-members. They are also required to give 10 per cent of their salaries to the church.

Miriam: Pols who don't get INC message are fools

Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago said that the evangelical and medical mission of the Iglesia ni Cristo (INC) has a political message, contrary to what Malacañang and the religious group claim.

"There is a message behind the INC event today. If you are a politician and you don't get it, you are a fool," Santiago said in a statement.

The INC event on Monday will provide free medical and dental services to over a million people in Manila that shut down the capital. The Palace has downplayed the claim that the event was a show of force by the influential religous group more than a mere relief mission.

"At this point, we have no reason to believe otherwise than the purpose for which it is being stated that it is a medical and dental mission," Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte said at a televised press briefing.

In radio and television interviews, INC's Minister of The Gospel Edwil Zabala denied that politics was behind Monday's event.

He said the INC has long been conducting the same event in various parts of the country to reach out to those who are in need.

On Twitter, several Filipinos complained of the heavy traffic caused by the event, which has also forced local government units in Metro Manila to suspend classes.

Supreme Court Spokesperson Theodore Te particularly criticized local officials responsible for managing the traffic caused by the event of the INC, which he described as a "favored sect." With report from phiSTAR.

DoTC awards ₱61.46 Million contracts for four domestic airport development projects

Proposed Puerto Princesa Palawan domestic airport. image from:  philippineairspace.blogspot.com

FOUR FIRMS have been awarded four separate airport projects in Visayas and Mindanao, the Department of Transportation and Communications (DoTC) said in a statement.

D.G. Sarmenta Construction bagged the contract for the Semi-Permanent Airport Terminal Project at the Puerto Princesa Airport for 21.50 million. The bid ceiling was 22.68 million. The project involves the installation of various electrical works, including air conditioning units.

V.T. Lao Construction won the contract to develop the Dipolog Airport for 26.70 million. It involves the construction of river protection and runway strip grade correction of the said airport. The original bid ceiling was 34.26 million.

Advance Tech Construction & Trading Corp. was awarded the Zamboanga Airport Development Project, which involves creek de-siltation, de-clogging of box culvert, and construction of a steel strainer, for 5.74 million. The bid ceiling was 6.02 million.

Vesa Engineering and Construction successfully bid for the Catarman Airport Development Project with 7.52 million. The project, whose original bid ceiling was 7.56 million, entails asphalt overlay of the runway and construction of a perimeter fence.

The DoTC awarded the contracts on Sept. 30, 2013

"This will improve passenger convenience by allowing the airports to meet increasing tourist arrivals in the meantime that long-term upgrades are being done," said DoTC Spokesperson Michael Arthur C. Sagcal said in the statement.

"We are aiming for this to be up by summer next year."

The agency saved over 9 million from these projects, which the government can now use to accelerate spending in order to boost the country's economy through the Disbursement Allocation Program (DAP), the DoTC said.

Meanwhile, the 1.72-billion Automated Fare Collection System (AFCS) public-private partnership project under DoTC is set to be auctioned off on Nov. 18, now that the DoTC has finalized the concessionaire agreement for the said project.

The project was supposed to be bid out on Aug. 30 but was deferred due to needed tweaks in its concessionaire agreement. It then was rescheduled to mid-October, before getting reset to November.

The AFCS project entails the decommissioning of the magnetic ticketing system of Light Rail Transit Lines 1 and 2 and Metro Rail Transit Line 3. The system will then be replaced with contactless smart card technology.

The project also involves the introduction of a centralized back office that will perform the necessary distribution of revenues.

Reporting:   L.C.S. Marasigan - BWorldOnline

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