Disputed South China Sea Islands (Image source: npr.org)
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Changing position on China's claims over the South China Sea would shame
its ancestors, while not facing up to infringements of Chinese sovereignty
there would shame its children, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Saturday.
China has become increasingly assertive in the South
China Sea, building artificial islands in areas over which the Philippines and
other countries have rival claims, sparking alarm regionally and in Washington.
Reuters report continues:
"One thousand years ago China was a large sea-faring
nation. So of course China was the first country to discover, use and
administer the Nansha Islands," Wang said, using the Chinese term for the
Spratly Islands, which together with the Paracel Islands form the bulk of
China's claims.
"China's demands of sovereignty over the Nansha
Islands have not expanded and neither will they shrink. Otherwise we would not
be able to face our forefathers and ancestors," the normally taciturn Wang
said in unusually strong comments.
China claims most of the potentially energy-rich South
China Sea, through which US$5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year. The
Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, and Taiwan also have overlapping
claims.
Speaking to academics and former officials, Wang said
China could not face its children and grandchildren if "the gradual and
incremental invasion of China's sovereignty and encroachment on China's
interests" was allowed to continue.
He said U.S. ships took Chinese troops to reclaim the
Spratlys after they were occupied by Japan during World War Two. Other
countries only started occupying what he said was Chinese territory from the
1960s after oil was discovered.
"China is in reality the biggest victim,"
Wang said.
On Friday, the U.S. State Department's number two
diplomat compared China's behaviour in pursuit of territory in the South China
Sea to that of Russia in eastern Ukraine.
Wang did not address those comments, but defended
China's land reclamation and building work in the South China Sea as necessary
to improve living conditions, pointing out that other countries had been
building there since the 1970s.
"It
is only recently that China has started necessary development," he said.
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