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China, Philippines accuse each other of ramming ships in South China Sea

1 Sep 2024, 3:07 AM
China, Philippines accuse each other of ramming ships in South China Sea
China, Philippines accuse each other of ramming ships in South China Sea
China, Philippines accuse each other of ramming ships in South China Sea

BEIJING, Sept 1 — The Philippines and China exchanged accusations of intentionally ramming Coast Guard vessels in disputed waters of the South China Sea yesterday, the latest in an escalating series of clashes in the vital waterway.

The collision near the Sabina Shoal was their fifth maritime confrontation in a month in a longstanding rivalry.

Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea, including parts claimed by the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam. Portions of the waterway, where US$3 trillion (RM12.9 trillion) worth of trade passes annually, are believed to be rich in oil and natural gas deposits, as well as fish stocks.

The Permanent Court of Arbitration in 2016 found China's sweeping claims had no legal basis, a ruling Beijing rejected.

Philippine Coast Guard spokesperson Jay Tarriela showed videos of yesterday confrontation at a press conference, saying China Coast Guard vessel 5205 "directly and intentionally rammed the Philippine vessel" without provocation.

The ramming damaged the 97-metre (320-foot) Teresa Magbanua, one of the Philippines' largest Coast Guard cutters, but no personnel were injured.

China Coast Guard spokesperson Liu Dejun said a Philippine ship, "illegally stranded" at the shoal, had lifted anchor and "deliberately rammed" a Chinese vessel. He called on the Philippines to withdraw immediately or bear the consequences.

"The Chinese Coast Guard will take the measures required to resolutely thwart all acts of provocation, nuisance and infringement and resolutely safeguard the country's territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests," Liu said in a statement.

Tarriela said Manila would not withdraw its ship "despite the harassment, the bullying activities and escalatory action of the Chinese coast guard".

[caption id="attachment_360600" align="aligncenter" width="1187"] An aerial view shows the Philippine-occupied Thitu Island, locally known as Pag-asa, in the contested Spratly Islands, the South China Sea, on March 9, 2023. — Picture by REUTERS[/caption]

US condemns Chinese 'violations'

The United States (US) Ambassador to the Philippines expressed Washington's support for the Philippines, a treaty ally.

"US condemns the multiple dangerous violations of international law by the PRC (People's Republic of China), including today's intentional ramming," MaryKay Carlson said on social media platform X (formerly Twitter).

The Philippines deployed a ship in April to the Sabina Shoal, 75 nautical miles from the coast of the Philippine province of Palawan. Manila accused Beijing of building an artificial island, saying it had documented piles of dead and crushed coral on the sandbars, which Beijing denies.

This week the Philippine Maritime Council said Chinese aircraft made unsafe manoeuvres against a civilian aircraft conducting patrols over two other disputed areas, the Scarborough Shoal and Subi reef.

The Philippines accused China of blocking a routine resupply mission on Sunday (August 25), saying Chinese vessels rammed and used water cannons on a fisheries bureau ship transporting food, fuel, and medical supplies for Filipino fishermen.

— Reuters

[caption id="attachment_353596" align="aligncenter" width="1079"] Chinese Coast Guard vessels fire water cannons towards a Philippine resupply vessel Unaizah in the South China Sea, on March 5, 2024. — Picture by REUTERS[/caption]

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