South China Sea dispute: Australia says countries must sign code of conduct

The defence minister, Kevin Andrews, called for all parties to exercise restraint, halt reclamation activities, refrain from provocative actions and ease tensions
A satellite image of what is claimed to be an airstrip under construction in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea.

The Guardian
Date: Sunday 31 May 2015
By: Australian Associated Press

Australia has urged China and south-east Asian countries squabbling over territory

A satellite image of what is claimed to be an airstrip under construction in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. Photograph: Digital Globe/AFP/Getty Images

A satellite image of what is claimed to be an airstrip under construction in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. Photograph: Digital Globe/AFP/Getty Images

in the South China Sea to sign a code of conduct immediately.

The defence minister, Kevin Andrews, issued a veiled swipe at China during a speech to an Asia Pacific security summit in Singapore on Sunday.

“We are particularly concerned at the prospect of militarisation of artificial structures,” Andrews told the summit, a reference to reports China had moved heavy weapons onto contested man-made islands a month ago.

China maintains it has sovereignty over most of the South China Sea, which is a major global shipping route and reportedly has oil and gas reserves.

It has ramped up construction of artificial islands in recent months, in a move some experts believe is aimed at bolstering its territorial claims.

Vietnam, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan and Brunei also claim parts of the sea.     [FULL  STORY]

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