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Hunt for genetic secret of Sichuan pig who survived amid quake rubble

Fiona Tam
Fiona Tam
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Is the reason the strong-willed pig managed to survive 36 days under the rubble of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, which left nearly 88,000 people and 4 million pigs dead, that it is genetically superior to other pigs?

A mainland tycoon and the country's leading DNA sequencing institute said they would find out by studying the four-year-old pig's DNA and comparing it to average pigs, according to a mainland media report.

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South China Sea
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Vietnam controls more than two dozen disputed islands and reefs in the South China Sea. Photo: Reuters

Vietnam risks wider Spratlys dispute with more land reclamation: Chinese think tank

  • The Beijing-based Grandview Institution says Hanoi ramped up island expansion in the South China Sea from 2021 using large dredgers
  • Vietnam has occupied more Chinese islands and reefs, stationed more troops and built more facilities than any other coastal state to the waters, it says
Orange Wang
Orange Wang
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Vietnam has reclaimed more land in the South China Sea in the past three years than in the previous four decades, a Chinese think tank said on Tuesday, warning that the activity could “complicate and expand” disputes in the waters.

In its report “Construction on Islands and Reefs Occupied by Vietnam, the Philippines and Malaysia in the Nansha Islands”, the Beijing-based Grandview Institution said that until 2019, Hanoi carried out only modest reclamation efforts on the 29 disputed islands and reefs it controlled in the Spratly Islands.

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The Philippines
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Soldiers of the Armed Forces of the Philippines take cover beside a wall during an assault exercise at Fort Magsaysay military camp north of Manila. Photo: EPA-EFE

South China Sea: Philippine admiral’s scandal sparks concerns about Chinese military exchanges, security threats

  • Nearly 40 officers from the Philippine armed forces took part in a military exchange programme with China that started from 2008
  • Chinese embassy’s recent actions show it is used to ‘influence’ Philippine military, could damage goodwill and trust of Filipino diplomats, analyst say
Raissa Robles
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High-profile accusations against a top Philippine navy officer who was once part of a military exchange programme with China have put the spotlight on other officials who had joined the same initiative, raising questions about the potential for broader diplomatic fallout and threats to national security.
Vice-Admiral Alberto Carlos is currently at the centre of a geopolitical scandal after the Chinese embassy in Manila claimed to have an audio recording of him agreeing to a controversial “new model” to manage conflict over a disputed shoal in the South China Sea that would constrain the Philippine military’s ability to act.

While the accusations remain unsubstantiated, Carlos’ ties to Beijing have been scrutinised in light of his attendance at a Chinese naval college, where he was the first Filipino military officer to have completed a course there as part of an intergovernmental programme.

Vice-Admiral Alberto Carlos, head of the Philippine military’s Western Command. Photo: Philippine Navy
This Week in Asia has learned from interviews with military insiders that 38 officers from the Armed Forces of the Philippines took part in the programme, which began in 2008.

Following a request from senators to abort the programme – which was raised after a lawmaker noted “with alarm” that some military officers up for promotion had studied in China – the armed forces’ Chief of Staff Romeo Brawner Jnr said in August the military was no longer sending officers to China.

However, he revealed that the discontinued programme was the product of a memorandum of understanding signed between Beijing and Manila in 2004 and noted that many other countries had similar initiatives with China, including other members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

He also said the point of the programme was to learn best practices from other countries’ militaries to see what could be applied to theirs.

Carlos is on leave from his post as chief of the navy’s Western Command, which guards Palawan and the country’s maritime interests in the West Philippine Sea – Manila’s term for the section of the South China Sea that defines its maritime territory and includes its exclusive economic zone.

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Carlos is the most senior Philippine military officer to have once studied in China. In 2008, he took a general staff course at People’s Liberation Army (Navy) Command College in Nanjing.

Chinese coastguard vessels try to block a civilian ship chartered by the Philippine Navy for the resupply mission for soldiers stationed at BRP Sierra Madre in the Second Thomas Shoal on March 23. Photo: Jeoffrey Maitem
Last week, the Chinese embassy in Manila claimed Carlos had approved a new “1+1” model for avoiding conflict around the highly disputed Second Thomas Shoal in the West Philippine Sea in a conversation with an embassy official.

An alleged audio transcript leaked to select reporters by the embassy claimed that Carlos had confirmed to the embassy that his superiors had approved the new model, which would only allow Manila to deploy one coastguard vessel and a resupply boat to its outpost on the shoal and, in response, China could launch one coastguard ship and a fishing boat.

The accusations have since been strongly denied by a number of Philippine officials and agencies, with some alleging that the embassy’s evidence had been fabricated.

Aaron Jed Rabena, a professorial lecturer at the University of the Philippines Asian Centre who specialises in strategic studies and geopolitics, told This Week in Asia that the disclosure of a wiretapped conversation without the consent of the person being tapped was “a violation of the Vienna Convention and [the Philippines’] anti-wire tapping law” and could prove problematic for the embassy.

Rabena, who has a doctorate in international relations from Shandong University, cautioned that this could have “economic repercussions or a tit-for-tat expulsion of some of our diplomats”. He also said it could destroy any goodwill China had nurtured with other Filipino alumni of its military schools.

“That’s possible, others might be worried that they are being recorded, including our diplomats and other government agents or agencies that deal with the West Philippine Sea issue,” he said.

A Filipino soldier practises holding a weapon as part of the annual US-Philippines Balikatan joint military exercises at Fort Magsaysay, Nueva Ecija province in April 2023. Photo: Reuters

Chester Cabalza, founding president of the International Development and Security Cooperation think tank in Manila, said the accusations against Carlos could have a chilling effect on fellow alumni of the military exchange programme with China.

Cabalza, who studied at the National Defence University in Beijing, asked how any of them could trust China if they could be “used by them” in the same way they had used Carlos.

He recalled that Beijing was “very aggressive” two years ago in consolidating the Philippine military officers who had studied in China into an alumni association.

A military officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told This Week in Asia that during last year’s Balikatan military exercises between US and Philippine troops, an officer who had studied in a Chinese military school said he was asked by a former classmate in Beijing to share materials about the drills.

The military officer who was interviewed said there was no protocol in the armed forces about sharing such materials with former foreign classmates.

Military officers should be wary of such approaches, warned retired Rear Admiral Rommel Jude Ong during a closed-door forum sponsored by the Stratbase ADR Institute think tank in Manila in January of last year.

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Marcos Jnr says China showing interest in South China Sea atolls that lie close to the Philippines

Marcos Jnr says China showing interest in South China Sea atolls that lie close to the Philippines

Ong said the “co-opting” of key defence officials to “establish a secure foothold in the Philippines, at the expense of the country’s maritime interests” was part of China’s “political warfare”.

China had also taken a softer approach, such as hosting “alumni events” for officers who had once studied in the country, he said.

Ong on Tuesday confirmed to This Week in Asia what he had earlier told the forum, adding that the Chinese embassy’s recent actions showed it was not just a diplomatic mission but was also used to “influence the decisions of military leadership and to use local media to convey disinformation”.

“Taken together with the current trajectory of domestic politics – the intention is to distract the country and government away from the [West Philippine Sea] issue, create discord and distrust among Filipinos, and weaken the institutions involved in fighting for our sovereign rights in [the area],” he said.

Rabena the lecturer said Manila’s military exchanges with Beijing were “a bit different” because the countries’ maritime disputes “cast malice into things related to or done by China”.

Still, he expressed hope that military-to-military ties might resume “when tensions lessen”, noting that Brawner had said the exchange programme was only temporarily halted.

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