Panay News

Coast Guard installs buoys in Kalayaan Island Group

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MANILA — The Philippine Coast Guard ( PCG) has installed five navigation­al buoys near four Philippine­held detachment­s in the Kalayaan Island Group (Spratly Islands) in the West Philippine Sea to ensure safer navigation for ships and fisherfolk­s.

The move is also deemed as symbolic of the country’s assertion of its sovereignt­y in the disputed waters.

The buoys were planted from May 10 to May 17 near Lawak (Nanshan) Island, Likas ( West York) Island, Parola ( Northeast Cay) I sland, and Pag- asa ( Thitu) Island through two buoy tenders BRP Corregidor (AE-891) and BRP

Bojeador (AE-46).

T h e s h i p s w e r e accompanie­d by tugboat BRP Habagat ( TB- 721) and multirole vessels BRP Capones (MRRV-4404) and BRP Suluan (MRRV-4406).

“We deployed five ships — two from Manila and three from Palawan — to install the five buoys for navigation­al safety. It’s the first time that there [ were] five PCG ships in the West Philippine Sea simultaneo­usly,” Adm. Artemio Abu, commandant of the PCG, told the Inquirer on Tuesday.

“We are claiming what is ours. That’s the message that

goes with it, the strong message that what is ours will be ours,” he added.

The China Coast Guard, which has a dominating presence in the West Philippine Sea and the rest of the South China Sea, did not interfere with the PCG activity although there were Chinese ships in the vicinity.

“I gave the instructio­n that we should be first in challengin­g

them. But there was no response from the Chinese,” Abu said.

A welcome c eremony to honor the Coast Guard personnel f rom t he f i ve vessels that participat­ed in the recently concluded mission is scheduled on Wednesday at South Harbor.

Abu himself visited Pagasa I s l and on Saturday, accompanie­d by top Coast Guard officials. He personally checked on PCG personnel deployed to the island and distribute­d relief supplies to residents.

Pag-asa is the largest of the nine features occupied by the Philippine­s in the Kalayaan Island Group and the only one with civilian inhabitant­s.

China claims the entire South China Sea, including the West Philippine Sea. The Philippine­s, China, Brunei, Vietnam, Taiwan and Malaysia have overlappin­g claims in these waters.

An internatio­nal arbitral tribunal ruled in 2016 to invalidate Beijing’s historical claims within its so-called ninedash line although it refused to accept the ruling.

 ?? ?? Philippine Coast Guard personnel maneuver a navigation­al buoy from their ship into the water — one of five they installed near their detachment­s at Spratly Islands in the West Philippine Sea from May 10 to May 17 to ensure safer navigation for ships and assert the country’s sovereignt­y in the disputed waters.
Philippine Coast Guard personnel maneuver a navigation­al buoy from their ship into the water — one of five they installed near their detachment­s at Spratly Islands in the West Philippine Sea from May 10 to May 17 to ensure safer navigation for ships and assert the country’s sovereignt­y in the disputed waters.

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