This website requires JavaScript.

Philippines Rejects Chinese Scholars’ Claim Over Batanes

Philippines Rejects Chinese Scholars’ Claim Over Batanes
The Philippine STAR file photo shows the Tayid Lighthouse in Batanes

Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. rejected as “baseless” and “ludicrous” assertions by Chinese scholars that its northernmost island-chain province belongs to Beijing, calling the claim concerning and worthy of challenge.

Chinese state-run news site GDToday reported on July 2 that scholars from institutions including Nanjing University argued at a June 30 symposium that Batanes was a natural extension of Taiwan and therefore belonged to China.

Beijing has not formally endorsed that position.

The assertions may add a new dimension to long-running tensions between Manila and Beijing, which are already embroiled in multiple disputes over islands and features in the South China Sea.

“I view this, once again, as probably a signal of a preconceived intention,” Teodoro told reporters on Thursday, July 9.

“It is not far-fetched to think that this is already part of their plan. And it also validates what we have been saying that they have a plan to control the entire Pacific Ocean,” he added. "What is this for, right? And we know this is baseless. This is nonsense. It is ludicrous.”

Teodoro stressed the claim “is concerning, and it is something that must be challenged.” He did not elaborate.

The Chinese embassy in Manila did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on Teodoro's remarks.

Batanes, home to about 20,000 people, is about 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of Taiwan along the strategically important Luzon Strait, a key passage linking the South China Sea and the Pacific Ocean.

It has become increasingly important in security planning and has hosted joint military exercises involving Philippine and allied US forces.

Beijing previously sanctioned Teodoro and his close relatives over what it said were “erroneous remarks” made about China.

The scholars’ comments came weeks after the Philippines and Japan announced in May they would begin formal talks on delimiting the maritime boundary of their exclusive economic zones and continental shelves in accordance with international law, a move China criticized.

Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea, a strategic waterway through which more than $3 trillion in trade passes annually, despite a 2016 arbitral ruling that invalidated those claims.