Categories: Top Stories

Philippines summons Chinese envoy over sea confrontations

MANILA (AFP): The Philippines has summoned China’s envoy, the foreign ministry said Monday, following the most tense confrontations between the countries’ vessels in years at flashpoint reefs in the disputed South China Sea.

Videos released by the Philippine Coast Guard showed Chinese ships blasting water cannon at Philippine boats during two separate resupply missions to Scarborough Shoal and Second Thomas Shoal on Saturday and Sunday.

There was also a collision between Philippine and Chinese boats at Second Thomas Shoal, with both countries trading blame for the incident.

Diplomatic protests had been filed and “the Chinese ambassador has also been summoned”, foreign ministry spokeswoman Teresita Daza told a news conference on Monday.

Daza said declaring China’s ambassador Huang Xilian as “persona non grata” in the Philippines was also “something that has to be seriously considered”.

China’s ramming and water cannoning of Filipino boats was a “serious escalation” of their tactics, Jonathan Malaya, assistant director general of the National Security Council, told reporters.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea, including waters and islands near the shores of its neighbours, and has ignored an international tribunal ruling that its assertions have no legal basis.

It deploys boats to patrol the busy waterway and has built artificial islands that it has militarised to reinforce its claims.

On Sunday, the US State Department called on China to halt its “dangerous and destabilizing” actions in the sea, while foreign diplomats in Manila also criticised China’s behaviour.

The confrontations at Scarborough Shoal and Second Thomas Shoal were the most intense between Philippine and Chinese vessels in years, analysts said, as the countries seek to assert their competing maritime territorial claims.

“I expect that this will become even more frequent and persistent,” said Jay Batongbacal, director of the University of the Philippines’ Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea.

“We should use the opportunity to build up our alliances and partnerships, and to prepare for the worst as it is clear that they will continue to deprive us of access to our rights and resources as a country.”

China seized Scarborough Shoal from the Philippines in 2012 following a tense standoff, while Manila grounded a World War II-vintage navy ship on Second Thomas Shoal in 1999 to check China’s advance in the waters.

Relations between Manila and Beijing have deteriorated under President Ferdinand Marcos, who has sought to improve ties with traditional ally Washington and push back against Chinese actions in the South China Sea.

In a statement late Sunday, Marcos said the Philippines remained “undeterred” following the latest incidents.

“No one but the Philippines has a legitimate right or legal basis to operate anywhere in the West Philippine Sea,” Marcos said, using Manila’s term for the South China Sea waters to the immediate west of the Philippines.

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Trump accuses Xi, Kim and Putin of conspiring against US

WASHINGTON (AFP): President Donald Trump accused the leaders of China, North Korea and Russia late…

2 hours ago

Xi, Putin, and Kim gather at Beijing landmark for a grand military parade

BEIJING (AFP): Chinese leader Xi Jinping and invited guests including Russian President Vladimir Putin and…

2 hours ago

Trump says 11 killed in US strike on drug-carrying vessel from Venezuela

WASHINGTON : President Donald Trump says the US has carried out a strike against a…

2 hours ago

UK doesn’t know how much massive Afghan data leak will cost, watchdog says

LONDON (Reuters) : Britain's defence ministry does not know how exactly much it will cost…

2 hours ago

Algeria president replaces prime minister

ALGIERS (AFP) : Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune on Thursday removed his prime minister, Nadir Larbaoui,…

3 hours ago

US House committee releases more than 33,000 pages of Jeffrey Epstein files

WASHINGTON : The US House of Representatives oversight committee on Tuesday released thousands of pages…

3 hours ago

This website uses cookies.