Philippine Daily Inquirer

16th day: 2 PH vessels, 2 Sino ships still at shoal

- By Jerry E. Esplanada and Christine O. Avendaño

TWO PHILIPPINE vessels and two Chinese maritime surveillan­ce ships were in the cluster of reefs and islands 220 kilometers west of Zambales on the 16th day of a standoff between Manila and Beijing over the potentiall­y mineral rich area, officials said.

Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario told reporters there were also six Chinese and two Filipino fishing boats in the area, which Manila calls Panatag Shoal, or Scarboroug­h Shoal in internatio­nal maps.

Del Rosario said unidentifi­ed aircraft

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flew over the area—two around midnight and another at 1:25 a.m. but added that the situation was “normal” and that there had been no “monitored harassment from the Chinese vessels.”

A Philippine Coast Guard search and rescue vessel has been posted at Panatag since the standoff began on April 10 when two Chinese vessels stopped the Philippine Navy from accosting Chinese fishing boats poaching marine life.

Del Rosario said that he and Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin planned to bring up the Panatag issue in a meeting in Washington on April 30 with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.

He also said that he would like to “maximize the benefits” that could be derived from the PH-US Mutual Defense Treaty. “This is a good time to do it.

‘ Very constructi­ve role’

Del Rosario said he was to meet with President Aquino today to review the Philippine agenda in the Washington talks on “strategic alliance.”

He said that while the United States had taken a “very constructi­ve role” on territoria­l claims by six nations, including the Philippine­s and China, on the Spratly islands, the Panatag issue was a “manifestat­ion of a greater threat” to countries concerned about freedom of navigation in the key waterway.

“I think all nations should be carefully watching what’s happening there,” he said. “All, not just the Philippine­s, will ultimately be negatively affected if we do not take a stand.”

“If you take a good look, it appears to us that China wants to establish the rules,” he said.

Agree to disagree

On Beijing’s call not to “internatio­nalize” the Scarboroug­h Shoal issue, Del Rosario said “we are making efforts to solve it peacefully.”

“Let’s just say that we agree to disagree on that respect,” said Malacañang spokespers­on Edwin Lacierda. He said the Philippine­s wanted to elevate the case to the Internatio­nal Court on the Law of the Sea.

Also yesterday, unidentifi­ed hackers posted a Chinese flag on the website of the Department of Budget and Management in two attacks on Wednesday, according to Budget Secretary Florencio Abad.

In a statement, Abad said the DBM website was undergoing a security audit and “may be inaccessib­le until critical issues are resolved.’’

Traced to China

“Our initial findings show that all important data in the website have not been compromise­d, and we are taking additional measures to reinforce the security of our servers and prevent future attacks,’’ said Abad. He cautioned other government agencies against similar attacks.

The presidenti­al website, Official Gazette (www.op.gov.ph) was also attacked last Sunday by networks traced to China. Just like the DBM website, the Palace website was jammed with many requests.

The attacks came as the Palace pleaded to both Filipinos and Chinese to stop attacking each other in cyber space amid the impasse at Panatag Shoal.

 ?? LIVE FROM MALACAÑANG President Aquino gestures during his interview by CNN’S Anna Coren at the Quezon Room in Malacañang on Thursday.
MALACAÑANG PHOTO ??
LIVE FROM MALACAÑANG President Aquino gestures during his interview by CNN’S Anna Coren at the Quezon Room in Malacañang on Thursday. MALACAÑANG PHOTO
 ?? RAFFY LERMA ?? PEOPLE collect shellfish on the shore as a Coast Guard vessel patrols the sea off Puerto Princesa, Palawan province, on Tuesday.
RAFFY LERMA PEOPLE collect shellfish on the shore as a Coast Guard vessel patrols the sea off Puerto Princesa, Palawan province, on Tuesday.
 ?? RICHARD REYES ?? FOREIGN Secretary Albert del Rosario goes to Washington to bring up the Panatag issue with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on April 30.
RICHARD REYES FOREIGN Secretary Albert del Rosario goes to Washington to bring up the Panatag issue with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on April 30.

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