Mindanao Times

Philippine­s already agreed to joint China probe over sinking

- France-Presse Agence

CHINA and the Philippine­s agreed to conduct a joint inquiry over the sinking of a Filipino fishing boat by a Chinese vessel in disputed waters, President Rodrigo Duterte’s spokesman said Saturday.

The June 9 incident, when the two boats collided in the South China Sea, has sparked public outrage.

Manila has accused the Chinese trawler of abandoning the vessel’s 22 Filipino crew members -- later rescued by Vietnamese fishermen -- but Beijing has rejected this.

China states the trawler merely “bumped” the vessel, and tried to rescue the fishermen -- but was “afraid of being besieged by other Filipino fishing boats”.

Duterte accepted the Chinese government’s offer to conduct a joint investigat­ion into the incident, presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said in a statement, “to determine what really transpired”.

The probe team should include “highly qualified and competent individual­s, with the Philippine­s and China having one representa­tive each, and a third member coming from a neutral country”, Panelo added.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman had also called on Thursday for a joint probe -- where each country could “properly handle the matter through friendly consultati­ons”.

While Manila has filed a diplomatic protest

against Beijing, Duterte has urged calm over the incident, setting aside the Philippine­s’ territoria­l row with China to court trade and investment­s.

“To be clear, we are by no means relinquish­ing any inch of our sovereign rights, nor compromisi­ng the rights of our 22 fishermen. We are demanding justice for our countrymen, and we are using all legal means toward that end,” Panelo said.

The incident -- which has fed into outrage over China’s expansive claims to the waterway -- occurred off Reed Bank, a fish and natural gas-rich area of submerged coral reefs.

It is claimed by China, Vietnam and the Philippine­s.

Brunei, Malaysia and Taiwan also have claims to all or part of the flashpoint sea, a key waterway for trillions of dollars in global trade each year.

 ??  ?? TREATMENT OF NON-COMMUNICAB­LE DISEASES. Department of Health (DOH) pharmacist Ederlyn Lorr Santiago presents the new Phil PEN Masterlist to some 122 non-communicab­le disease coordinato­rs of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal and Quezon provinces (Calabarzon) during the Non-Communicab­le Diseases Program Implementa­tion Review at Ciudad Christhia Resort, San Mateo, Rizal on June 18-21, 2019. The Package of Essential Non-communicab­le (PEN) Disease Interventi­ons, also known as Phil PEN, aims to reduce the rates of lifestyle-related non-communicab­le diseases in Calabarzon, such as cardiovasc­ular diseases, cancers, chronic respirator­y diseases, and diabetes, through early screening and consultati­ons including timely treatment at the local level. (PNA photos by Ben Briones)
TREATMENT OF NON-COMMUNICAB­LE DISEASES. Department of Health (DOH) pharmacist Ederlyn Lorr Santiago presents the new Phil PEN Masterlist to some 122 non-communicab­le disease coordinato­rs of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal and Quezon provinces (Calabarzon) during the Non-Communicab­le Diseases Program Implementa­tion Review at Ciudad Christhia Resort, San Mateo, Rizal on June 18-21, 2019. The Package of Essential Non-communicab­le (PEN) Disease Interventi­ons, also known as Phil PEN, aims to reduce the rates of lifestyle-related non-communicab­le diseases in Calabarzon, such as cardiovasc­ular diseases, cancers, chronic respirator­y diseases, and diabetes, through early screening and consultati­ons including timely treatment at the local level. (PNA photos by Ben Briones)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines