Beijing's claim to almost the entire South China Sea is shown on
Chinese maps with a nine-dash line that stretches deep into the
maritime heart of Southeast Asia. Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan,
Malaysia and Brunei also claim parts of the waterway.
The arbitration case against China in the Hague "is a knot that has
impeded the improvement and development of Sino-Philippine
relations", a statement on the Foreign Ministry's website cited Wang
as saying in Manila.
"We do not want this knot to become tighter and tighter, so that it
even becomes a dead knot," Wang told reporters. "As for how to
loosen or open the knot, (we'll) have to look at the Philippines."
The nine-dash line also includes parts of the Indonesian-held Natuna
islands and Jakarta, which has kept a low profile in the dispute,
could take China to the "International Criminal Court" if Beijing's
claim was not resolved through dialogue, Indonesia's security chief,
Luhut Panjaitan, told reporters on Wednesday.
Although he specified the International Criminal Court, which deals
with war crimes, it would appear he meant an international tribunal
such as the Permanent Court of Arbitration.
For years, China has insisted that disputes with rival claimants be
handled bilaterally.
In a legal setback for Beijing, the arbitration court ruled last
month that it had jurisdiction to hear some territorial claims the
Philippines had filed against China.
The Philippines has welcomed the decision and its Foreign Affairs
Department said on Wednesday it would pursue the case "to its
logical conclusion". "China's nine-dash line claim is expansive,
excessive and has no basis under international law," said foreign
affairs spokesman Charles Jose. "If left unchallenged, we could lose
about 80 percent of our EEZ (exclusive economic zone)."
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China has boycotted the legal proceedings and rejects the court's
authority in the case.
Manila filed the case in 2013 to seek a ruling on its right to
exploit waters in its 200-nautical mile EEZ as allowed under the UN
Convention on the Law of the Sea.
"The person who caused the problem should solve it," Wang said. "We
hope that the Philippines can make a more sensible choice."
Next week, Manila hosts the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
summit, an event at which the United States says the South China Sea
will likely come up on the sidelines.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said China hoped
"sensitive political topics" would not be discussed there.
"We hope all sides can uphold the economic trade essence of the APEC
forum," he told reporters in Beijing.
(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing and Randy Fabi in
Jakarta; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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