An aerial photo taken on Sept. 25, 2015 from a seaplane of Hainan Maritime Safety Administration shows cruise vessel Haixun 1103 heading to the Yacheng 13-1 drilling rig during a patrol in south China Sea. [Photo/Xinhua] |
For quite a long period of time after World War II, no country had challenged China's sovereignty over the Nansha Islands and related rights in the South China Sea, long recognized by the international community, a senior Chinese diplomat said in an article.
The article, co-authored by Fu Ying, chairperson of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National People's Congress of China, and Wu Shicun, president of the National Institute of the South China Sea, reviews the chain of events leading to the escalation of tensions in the South China Sea.
It combs the historical facts date back to ancient times that the sovereignty right of South China Sea islands belongs to China and has been recognised by the international community for a long time.
"This area in question was initially discovered and named by China as the Nansha Islands, over which China was the first to exercise sovereignty and that exercise has been ongoing," it said.
"Before the 1930s, there was no dispute over China's ownership of them, as reflected in many maps and encyclopedias published around the world."
It said the Cairo Declaration of November 1943, signed by the heads of the governments of China, the United States and the United Kingdom, proclaimed that "...Japan shall be stripped of all the islands in the Pacific which she has seized or occupied since the beginning of the first World War in 1914, and that all the territories Japan has stolen from the Chinese, such as Manchuria, Formosa, and the Pescadores, shall be restored to the Republic of China."
In 1947, the Ministry of the Interior of China's Nationalist government renamed a total of 159 islands, islets and sandbanks, including those of the Nansha Islands, historically under China's jurisdiction in the South China Sea. Meanwhile, the Nationalist government officially published a chart of its territorial waters that China had owned in the South China Sea demarcated by an eleven-dash line, the article noted.
"For a long time afterwards, the United States made no objections whatsoever. Given it being a long-term ally of Taiwan and its heavy presence in postwar Asia, the US had every reason to be aware of the existence of the chart. Obviously, China's position was recognized and acknowledged," it stressed.