Jakarta (MI) : Four ASEAN countries
contest China’s expansive nine (now ten) dash line claim in the South
China Sea. Indonesia is not among these countries, allowing it to
operate as a somewhat credible intermediary between the other
disputants. However, as The Diplomat noted earlier this year,
the Natuna archipelago off the northwest coast of Borneo could
increasingly bring Indonesia into the ranks of ASEAN states that regard
Beijing’s expansive South China Sea claims with scorn. A Reuters report published
this week takes a look at the details of the Natuna archipelago, which
both Jakarta and Beijing acknowledge as “part of Indonesia’s Riau
Province.”
The issue with Natuna is primarily one of ambiguity stemming from
China’s dashed line claim in the South China Sea. The claims, first
substantiated by the Kuomintang (KMT) government when it ruled the
mainland in 1947, represent the maximum extent of
Beijing’s claims in the South China Sea.
The Indonesian foreign
ministry maintains that there is no dispute with China over the Natuna
archipelago but has noted that the waters surrounding the archipelago
were included in the latest iteration of China’s official maps detailing
its dashed line claims. Based on comments made by Indonesian officials
earlier this year, it seems that Beijing hasn’t been entirely
transparent about its intentions for the Natuna archipelago and if it
indeed does see these islands as falling within the scope of its
nine-dash claim. Indonesia for its part sought clarifications from the
United Nations on what China’s nine dash line means in an international
legal sense, according to Reuters.
According to Natuna’s district chief, there are concerns among those
residing on the islands that China may attempt to seize the territory
from Indonesia in the future. ”We’re worried they’ll take over this
territory,” Ilyas Sabli, the district chief of the islands, told Reuters.
China seized the Scarborough Shoal, an uninhabited area, from the
Philippines in 2012. Earlier this year, it placed an oil rig within
waters claimed by Vietnam as part of its exclusive economic zone (EEZ),
sparking a crisis. There is no precedent for China seizing inhabited
territory in the South China Sea to date. Natuna is home to 80,000
people across 27 islands.
The Natuna islands issue currently sits in a strange sort of limbo.
Indonesian officials are wary both of China’s intentions and potentially
of losing their privileged leadership position within ASEAN by acting
on their suspicions. Beijing, meanwhile, seems content to leave matters
as ambiguous as ever, focusing instead on its higher-profile disputes
with the Philippines and Vietnam. China has nonetheless stepped up its
assertiveness in its near seas in recent years. This suggests that
Indonesians officials are right to stay alert regarding China’s
intentions for Natuna.
Sumber : Thediplomat
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