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4 Philippine Navy officers hurt after China fires water cannons at ship

- By Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza Reporter

AT LEAST four Philippine Navy officers were injured on Tuesday after China’s coast guard fired water cannons at one of two wooden civilian boats used in a resupply mission for Filipino troops at a remote outpost in the South China Sea.

The water cannons from two Chinese Coast Guard vessels shattered the windshield of Unaizah Mae 4, “causing minor injuries to at least four personnel on board,” the Philippine­s’ National Security Council (NSC) said in a statement.

The incident happened while President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. was in Melbourne for a three-day summit between Australia and Southeast Asian nations. On Monday, he vowed to push back if China continues to violate Philippine sovereignt­y and sea rights.

The Navy officers were treated by Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) personnel from the BRP Sindangan, which was escorting the civilian boat during the mission, NSC said.

Before this, a Chinese coast guard vessel executed “dangerous maneuvers” against the escort ship, leading to a minor collision that resulted in “superficia­l structural damage” to the hull of the PCG vessel, it added.

It said Unaizah Mae 1, one of the two resupply boats, managed to deliver supplies to BRP Sierra Madre, a World War II-era vessel that Manila deliberate­ly grounded at Second Thomas Shoal in 1999 to assert its sea claims.

“The systematic and consistent manner in which the People’s Republic of China carries out these illegal and irresponsi­ble actions puts into question the sincerity of its calls for peaceful dialogue and lessening tensions,” NSC said.

The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) summoned the Chinese deputy chief of mission “to convey the Philippine­s’ protest against the aggressive actions undertaken by the China Coast Guard and Chinese maritime militia,” the agency said in a WhatsApp group message.

During the meeting, Philippine officials said China’s interferen­ce in the Philippine­s’ “routine and lawful activities in its own exclusive economic zone is unacceptab­le.” “China’s actions in Ayungin Shoal (Second Thomas Shoal) infringes upon the Philippine­s’ sovereign rights and jurisdicti­on.”

“The Philippine­s demands that Chinese vessels leave the vicinity of Ayungin Shoal immediatel­y.”

Earlier in the day, the Philippine military said the resupply mission seeks to keep Philippine presence within the country’s exclusive economic zone in the South China Sea.

“It also demonstrat­es the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s’ commitment to ensuring that every Filipino will rightfully benefit from this resourceri­ch region.”

The Chinese Coast Guard in a statement posted on its website accused the Philippine vessels of “intrusion,” adding that BRP Sierra Madre had been “illegally grounded” at the shoal.

“The response of the China Coast Guard is in accordance with legal protocols and based on profession­al procedures,” it said, adding that the Philippine­s “broke promises, provoked with extortion tactics, sensationa­lized the story, and kept sabotaging the peace and stability of the South China Sea.”

The Japanese Embassy in Manila said Japan “reiterates its grave concern on the repeated dangerous actions in the South China Sea including the recent use of water cannon by the Chinese Coast Guard.”

“Japan will continue to stand with the Philippine­s and cooperate with likeminded countries to maintain the peace and stability in the region,” it added.

Second Thomas Shoal is just 240 kilometers west of the Philippine main island of Luzon and is nearly 900 kilometers from Hainan, the nearest major Chinese landmass.

Stanford University’s Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation earlier said Chinese maritime militia ships had set up “blockade positions” while the Philippine vessels were on their way to Second Thomas Shoal.

‘DANGEROUS MANEUVERS’

After the incident, Raymond M. Powell, a fellow at the Gordian Knot Center, said China “demonstrat­ed that it is committed to violently enforcing its illegal blockade of the BRP Sierra Madre, the Philippine­s’ outpost for 25 years located in its own lawful exclusive economic zone.”

“There is no other place in the world where one country is conducting a blockade against another during peacetime,” he told BusinessWo­rld in an X message.

Mr. Powell said the outrage should serve as an opportunit­y for the internatio­nal community to stand beside the Philippine­s and demand for China to “stop behaving like a pariah nation.”

European Ambassador to the Philippine­s Luc Veron said in an X post the “pattern of dangerous maneuvers and blocking” by Chinese vessels was troubling.

US Ambassador to the Philippine­s MaryKay L. Carlson condemned China’s “dangerous maneuvers,” which she said endangered lives and resulted in injuries.

The Philippine Foreign Affairs department said it had filed nine diplomatic protests against China this year, bringing the total since Mr. Marcos assumed office in July 2022 to 142.

Mr. Marcos was in Melbourne for a special summit between ASEAN and Australia, which has boosted its ties with Manila in the face of an increasing­ly assertive China.

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