Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said yesterday that the Philippines would ask its lawyers to petition the Arbitral Tribunal in the Hague, the Netherlands, to issue an earlier ruling after China said it would not get involved in the case, which should shorten the arbitration proceedings.
"I am hoping we could get something by next year ... because China is not participating and because the situation is getting worse every day in the South China Sea," del Rosario told reporters.
Philippine officials have said it may take three to four years for the tribunal to issue a decision.
Even with the pending legal challenge, China has continued to expand and fortify its claims, including reclaiming land in disputed reefs that can be turned into offshore military bases, possibly with airstrips, del Rosario said.
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The tribunal issued a statement early this month giving China until December 15 to submit written arguments and evidence against the Philippine complaint, but Beijing said it would not join the arbitration proceedings.
Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan also have had overlapping territorial claims in the South China Sea which have sparked confrontations.
There have been fears the conflicts, including a dispute between Japan and China in the East China Sea, could spark an armed conflict, although analysts say a major fight is unlikely.