Philippines protests China’s Spratly claim at UN
The Philippines said Thursday it had lodged a formal protest at the  United Nations over China’s claims to the Spratly islands and adjacent  South China Sea waters.
The newest controversy in the decades-old  multilateral dispute centres on formal notes sent by China to the UN  secretary general in 2009 outlining the basis of its claim, foreign  ministry spokesman Ed Malaya said.
“Yes, we can confirm that the  Philippines filed a note with the UN expressing its position on the  nine-dotted line,” he told AFP, referring to a map attached to the  Chinese letter that delineated China’s claim.
The Philippines and  China, along with Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam, claim all or  part of the Spratlys, which are believed to sit on vast mineral  resources.
Manila last month complained that Chinese patrol boats  inappropriately harassed a Philippine oil exploration vessel in disputed  waters near the Spratlys.
The Philippines later announced plans to  pursue oil exploration in the South China Sea and to upgrade a military  airfield on Thitu island.
Thitu is the largest of the seven Spratly  islands that the Philippines occupies. The Philippines claims more than  50 islands in the archipelago.
China has recently reiterated its  exclusive claims to all the disputed areas and their adjacent waters,  much of which is closer to Philippine land than Chinese.
A copy of  the protest sent by the Philippines to the UN on April 5 and seen by AFP  on Thursday said the Chinese notes were in reaction to Vietnam and  Malaysia’s own letters to the UN outlining their rival claims.
The  protest said the Philippine-claimed section of the Spratlys, which  Manila calls the Kalayaan island group, was an integral part of the  Philippines.
“The claim (by China)… outside of the aforementioned  geological features of the (Kalayaan island group) and their ‘adjacent  waters’ would have no basis under international law, specifically  UNCLOS,” it said.
The term refers to the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, on which the Philippines says its Spratly claim is based.
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