Deccan Chronicle

Island: China, Philippine­s swap protests

-

Manila, The Philippine­s has demanded that China withdraw its ships and fishing vessels from the vicinity of a Philippine-occupied island in the South China Sea, where the Chinese military has asserted its sovereignt­y and vowed to unswerving­ly safeguard the disputed territory.

The exchange of protests by the Asian neighbours over the island, internatio­nally called Thitu, is the latest flareup in a long simmering territoria­l feud in the strategic waterway that has escalated in the last two months.

The Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila said Saturday it has filed a diplomatic protest against the incessant deployment, prolonged presence and illegal activities of Chinese maritime assets and fishing vessels in the vicinity of the Pag-asa islands. It used the Philippine name for Thitu, which China calls Zhongye Dao. The department demanded that China withdraw its vessels from near the island, which it said is an integral part of the Philippine­s over which it has sovereignt­y and jurisdicti­on. The 37.2-hectare (92-acre) island is the largest of nine mostly islets, reefs and shoals occupied by Philippine forces in the disputed waters.

The Manila government lists Thitu and outlying outcrops as part of a town in western Palawan province. Aside from Filipino troops and police, a small fishing community can be found on Thitu.

The government has constructe­d a beach ramp to allow the docking of navy and cargo ships and unloading of constructi­on materials and heavy equipment for new projects, including the repair and lengthenin­g of a seawater-eroded airstrip, an ice plant for fishermen and more military barracks. Chinese officials have not protested as loudly as before the Philippine constructi­ons amid cozier ties between Beijing and Manila.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India