Philippines raises alarm over China's 'dangerous' actions in South China Sea
Chinese and Philippine vessels engage in a new confrontation in the South China Sea, with Manila charging that a Chinese coast guard ship blasted a Philippine supply ship with a water cannon in disputed waters.
The Philippines has accused the Chinese coast guard of "dangerous harassment" of Filipino boats in the disputed South China Sea, including firing a water cannon and blocking vessels on a resupply mission.
The incident happened on Friday during a Philippine mission to deliver provisions to a tiny garrison on Second Thomas Shoal, which is part of the Spratly Islands and a longstanding flashpoint between the countries.
Manila said the Chinese coast guard and other vessels "recklessly harassed, blocked, executed dangerous maneuvers" as they tried to "illegally impede or obstruct" Friday's mission.
A Chinese coast guard vessel had fired a water cannon against one of two supply boats, according to the Philippines' National Task Force for the West Philippine Sea.
The supply mission was also the target of "extremely reckless and dangerous harassment at close proximity" by Chinese boats inside the shoal, it said in a statement, adding that the Philippine vessels still managed to deliver their cargo.
China, however, said it "took control measures" against two Philippine transport boats and three coast guard vessels it insisted were in Chinese waters.
"The Philippines' actions infringe on China's territorial sovereignty," China Coast Guard spokesperson Gan Yu said. "We urge the Philippines to immediately stop its infringing actions."
Philippines summons China's envoy over collisions involving its vessels and Chinese coast guard ships in disputed South China Sea pic.twitter.com/3FkrEScBXG
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'Illegal and irresponsible actions'
Second Thomas Shoal is about 200 kilometres (124 miles) from the western Philippine island of Palawan, and more than 1,000 kilometres from China's nearest major landmass, Hainan island.
A handful of Filipino troops are stationed on the crumbling BRP Sierra Madre, which the Philippine Navy grounded on the reef in 1999 to check China's advance in the waters.
The troops depend on the resupply missions for their survival.
The task force said the Philippine embassy in Beijing had lodged a protest with the Chinese foreign ministry over the latest incident, which it said had "put the lives of our people at risk".
"The systematic and consistent manner in which the People's Republic of China carries out these illegal and irresponsible actions puts into question and significant doubt the sincerity of its calls for peaceful dialogue," the statement said.
'Renewed aggressive tendencies'
Friday's incident comes nearly three weeks after two collisions between Chinese and Philippine vessels during another resupply mission to the BRP Sierra Madre, with the countries trading blame.
China's intentions were clearly designed to "stop the resupply missions to the Sierra Madre", said Jay Batongbacal, director of the University of the Philippines' Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea.
"The use of water cannon again is an indication of something like renewed aggressive tendencies... it's like they are demonstrating that they are not being deterred by what we've been doing," he told AFP.
The Marcos administration has publicly criticised Chinese actions in the South China Sea, and sought stronger security ties with Japan and the United States in the face of Chinese actions in the waters.