US warns Beijing on South China Sea islands

China is one of the number of the countries who claim to parts of South China sea.
LION CITY; The US will
not accept China's militarisation of man-made islands in the South China Sea,
Defence Secretary, James Mattis has warned.
Speaking at
a security conference in Singapore, he said such moves undermined regional stability.
China's territorial claims in the resource-rich South China Sea are contested
by several nations.
At the same
time, Gen Mattis praised Beijing's efforts to restrain North Korea's missile
and nuclear activity. His comments came shortly after the UN Security Council expanded
targeted sanctions against North Korea in response to a series of
missile tests conducted this year.

US Defence Secretary, General James
Mattis
In his
speech at the annual Shangri-La Dialogue forum, Gen Mattis said: "We
oppose countries militarising artificial islands and enforcing excessive
maritime claims.
"We
cannot and will not accept unilateral, coercive changes to the status
quo."
President
Donald Trump and other senior US officials have repeatedly stated that they
would protect its interests in the South China Sea, a key shipping route.
During his
nomination hearing earlier this year, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson warned
that the US was "going to have to send China a clear signal that first the
island-building stops, and second your access to those islands also is not
going to be allowed."
In response,
the Chinese foreign ministry said Beijing would "remain firm to defend its
rights in the region".
But in
Singapore Gen Mattis also struck a positive note on US-China relations, saying
that while competition between the two countries "is bound to occur,
conflict is not inevitable".
The biggest
question amongst Asian delegates attending the forum has been how much of a role
the US will continue to play in this increasingly tense region, the BBC's
Karishma Vaswani in Singapore reports.
She adds
that Gen Mattis sought to reassure his peers that the US was not turning its
back on Asia.
Rival
countries have wrangled over territory in the South China Sea for centuries,
but tension has steadily increased in recent years. Its islets and waters are
claimed in part or in whole by Taiwan, China, Vietnam, the Philippines,
Malaysia and Brunei.
Beijing has
been building artificial islands on reefs and carrying out naval patrols in
waters also claimed by these other nations.
Although the
previous US administration of Barack Obama insisted it was neutral, it spoke
out strongly against the island-building and sought to build ties with, and
among, the South East Asian nations whose claims overlap those of China.
In July
2016, an international tribunal ruled against Chinese claims, backing a case
brought by the Philippines, but Beijing said it would not respect the verdict.
The
frictions have sparked concern that the area is becoming a flashpoint with
global consequences.
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