The
Philippines said on Saturday it was planning to change the name of a stretch of
water east of the country in a bid to highlight its sovereignty over the area,
which was surveyed recently by a Chinese vessel.
A Chinese
survey ship was tracked for several months late last year moving around Benham
Rise -- declared part of the Philippines' continental shelf in 2012 by the
United Nations, stirring concern in Manila about Beijing's possible intentions.
China says
the ship was simply passing through the area and was not engaged in any other
activity, and the country's foreign minister said last week China fully
respects the Philippines' maritime area rights over Benham Rise.
Manila said
on Saturday it wanted to rename the area, which is roughly the size of Greece
and believed by some scientists to be rich in biodiversity and tuna,
"Philippine Rise".
"A
motion has been made subject to the conduct of the requisite legal and
logistical study to effect the change," presidential spokesman Ernesto
Abella said in a statement.
The
president ordered the foreign ministry and executive secretary's offices to
study changing the territory's name to emphasize Philippine sovereign rights,
he said.
Territorial
rows with China have usually centered on the South China Sea, west of the
Philippines, a conduit for about $5 trillion of shipped goods annually. China
lays claim to almost the entire South China Sea.
President
Rodrigo Duterte, who has sought a warm relationship with Beijing following
years of territorial spats under the previous president, ordered the navy to
put up "structures" in Benham Rise to assert sovereignty over the
area.
He has come
under pressure of late for what critics say is a defeatist stance, accusing him
of turning a blind eye to China's island-building in the exclusive economic
zone of the Philippines and its activities at Benham Rise.
A Senate
hearing this week revealed China sought permission two years ago to survey
Benham Rise, but the request was rejected because it would not let Philippine
experts take part.
(Reuters)
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