News

  • Vietnam rejects Chinese passports with nine-dash line

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    Marcopolo Tam, a member of a pro-China business group in Hong Kong, points to what is now known as the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea on a Japanese World War II era map purporting to support China’s claims to vast parts of the South China Sea, in Hong Kong Thursday, July 14, 2016. […]

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  • Japan Is Quietly Building A Tiny Tropical Islet, But An Angry China Has Noticed

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    Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. Japan’s southernmost islet is so small at nine square meters it conjures up comparisons to boats and bedrooms. Curiously, the government in Tokyo has spent an estimated $600 million on infrastructure such as cement and steel breakwaters to prevent erosion of the tiny feature. It’s also cultivating […]

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  • How to stop China from building military infrastructures on West PH Sea? Chinese Greenie has idea

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    ULAAN BAATAR, Mongolia — Experts, including Supreme Court Justice and principal proponent in the case Antonio Carpio, agree that the ruling of the international arbitral tribunal for the Philippines in its territorial dispute against China may not be enforceable. But a Chinese environmentalist has an idea on how to stop his country from building military […]

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  • Philippines wins trial of the century

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    The Hague ruling is binding and final, so China can comply or be branded as an outlaw in the region. “Nothing but truth in here and it was unfair,” lamented Aglaya Ivanovna, one of Dostoyevsky’s protagonists in The Idiot. This was essentially China’s response to a major legal setback, when an arbitration body at The […]

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  • Defending David Against the World’s Goliaths in International Court

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    “I consider the Reagan administration to be an anomaly in terms of respect for international law. The United States does have a history of complying with the judgments of the International Court of Justice.” PAUL S. REICHLER Credit Mary F. Calvert for The New York Times BEIJING — Paul S. Reichler’s first big break came […]

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  • South China Sea: Vietnam detains activists after international ruling

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    Scores of activists have been detained in Vietnam’s capital as they gathered to protest against China who rejected last week’s ruling dismissing its claims to much of the South China Sea. Domestic critics accuse Hanoi of being too meek towards Beijing Anti-Chinese sentiment runs deep in communist Vietnam, but the country’s authoritarian rulers move swiftly […]

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  • Why a ruling that cannot be enforced still matters

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    It shows the Law of the Sea treaty provides a level playing field for states, big and small, to protect their legal rights. On Tuesday, the Arbitral Tribunal in the South China Sea disputes between the Philippines and China issued its long-awaited final award. It rejected China’s claim of historic rights within the “Nine-Dash Line”. […]

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  • What China Can Learn From the South China Sea Case

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    After a major diplomatic set-back, a look back at how China got to this point. The ruling by the tribunal in the Philippines vs. China arbitration case is no doubt a major setback to Chinese diplomacy. No matter how people evaluate the quality and impartiality of the ruling, especially concerning it is overwhelmingly in favor […]

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  • China and UNCLOS: An Inconvenient History

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    As South China Sea tensions rise, Beijing rethinks its relationship with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. The rising tensions in South China Sea, especially the arbitration lawsuit brought by the Philippines, have stimulated debate and research about China’s South China Sea policy, as well as about the United Nations Convention on […]

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  • China’s problem with the rule of law

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    THE weak legal standing of Beijing’s actions in the South China Sea has never been in any doubt outside China’s borders. The Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration’s (PCA’s) ruling on Tuesday rebutting Beijing’s claims vis-a-vis the Philippines is thus unsurprising, even if its sweeping nature exceeded analysts’ expectations. The course Beijing charts now will have […]

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  • Why China cares about the South China Sea

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    China’s territorial claims are driven by a sense of historical victimisation. Salvatore Babones is a specialist in global economic structure. The judges have spoken: China has no legal basis for its claims to sovereignty over the South China Sea. China’s “nine-dash line” territorial claims, which cover most of the South China Sea, will not be […]

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  • Interview: The South China Sea Ruling

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    International law expert Roncevert Ganan Almond on the recent ruling by the Permanent Court of Arbitration. What do you think about this ruling? Does it follow your predictions? The unanimous ruling of the Permanent Court of Arbitration (the “PCA” or “Tribunal”) in the dispute between the Philippines and China is a landmark decision under the […]

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