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Philippines warns neighbours about China
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) April 23, 2012

US, China slate strategic talks in Beijing May 3-4
Washington (AFP) April 23, 2012 - The US and China will hold broad talks on political and economic issues in Beijing on May 3-4 in an ongoing effort to keep often-fraught relations cordial, the US Treasury announced Monday.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner will hold talks with Vice Premier Wang Qishan and State Councilor Dai Bingguo in the fourth annual US-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue.

The talks, initiated in 2009, can cover a long list of issues, including strategic concerns, the environment, human rights and trade issues, but is usually more broad-brush than targeted at specific issues.

The talks in May 2011 looked at both countries' interests in Afghanistan and covered the nuclear programs of North Korea and Iran.

They also produced pacts on cooperation between companies and universities from both countries and joint work addressing health and energy needs in poor countries.


Philippine President Benigno Aquino warned his country's neighbours Monday they should fear Beijing's growing aggressiveness over its claims in the South China Sea.

Aquino stressed China's territorial claims spanned a huge area and were getting "closer and closer" to the Philippine archipelago.

"They claim this entire body of water practically. Look at what is excluded and what they are claiming," Aquino told reporters as he pointed to a map of the area. "So how can the others not be fearful of what is transpiring?"

Aquino's comments came shortly after his government said it would raise an increasingly tense dispute with China over the Scarborough Shoal at a high-level bilateral meeting with the US next week.

Manila and Beijing have been locked in a standoff over Scarborough, a group of islands in the South China Sea, since Chinese vessels blocked Philippine attempts to arrest eight Chinese fishing boats' crews earlier this month.

Aquino said Scarborough was within the Philippines' internationally recognised exclusive economic zone and questioned China's historical basis for its claims.

"Its like (their claims) are getting closer and closer" to shore, he said.

The shoal is about 230 kilometres (140 miles) from the Philippines' main island of Luzon, while the nearest Chinese land mass is Hainan province 1,200 kilometres to the northwest, according to Philippine naval maps.

With China ratcheting up the pressure, Manila said earlier Monday the Scarborough issue would be formally raised in talks between Foreign Secretary Alberto del Rosario and Defence Secretary Voltaire Gazmin and their US counterparts Hillary Clinton and Leon Panetta in Washington next week.

The two nations are bound by a mutual defence pact in which the United States has pledged to come to the aid of its weaker ally if it faces military aggression.

Manila's move could further anger China, which has insisted the United States should have no role in the dispute.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea and is also locked in disputes with Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam, as well as its rival Taiwan.

But China said late Monday that it had withdrawn two ships from the disputed area on Sunday, leaving only one vessel for maritime surveillance, China's official Xinhua news agency reported.

It quoted a spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in the Philippines, Zhang Hua, as saying Beijing was trying to reduce tensions.

"China is ready to settle this incident through friendly diplomatic consultations," Zhang said.

The Philippines had earlier called on ASEAN countries to take a common stand against Beijing over the South China Sea, a call that has caused differences within the bloc fearful of antagonising the region's most powerful nation.

The Global Times, a newspaper run by China's ruling Communist Party, warned in an editorial at the weekend of a potential "small-scale war" to end the Scarborough Shoal standoff.

"Once the war erupts, China must take resolute action to deliver a clear message to the outside world it does not want a war, but definitely has no fear of it," the editorial said.

strs-jvg/bxs/pdh

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Philippine websites hit by Chinese hackers: govt
Manila (AFP) April 23, 2012 - The Philippines said alleged Chinese hackers attacked three websites maintained by President Benigno Aquino's office on Monday.

The attacks came shortly after the government said it would raise its concerns with the United States over an increasingly tense territorial sea dispute with China.

Aquino's office, in a statement, said a "significant spike in traffic with malicious URL requests" flooded the president's official gazette (www.gov.ph) and two other websites (www.pcdspo.gov.ph, www.malacanang.gov.ph) run by his communications team.

"Information gathered through our data analysis indicated that the attack originated from IP (internet protocol) addresses were assigned to Chinese networks," the statement said.

The attack caused a "temporary disruption of service," the statement added.

Monday's attack came three days after hackers claiming to be from China defaced the website of the Philippines' top government-run university to assert their country's claim over South China Sea.

Local reports said a group of Philippine hackers calling itself "Anonymous" allegedly retaliated by hacking two Chinese government websites.

Philippine Foreign Ministry spokesman Raul Hernandez earlier Monday condemned the cyber attacks and called on hackers from both sides to stop the online war.

"We denounce such cyber attacks regardless from which side they are coming from," Hernandez said.

"We think they are counter productive and only add to the tension. We call on both Filipino and Chinese netizens to be more responsible and encourage dialogue rather than discord," he said.



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