Philippine Daily Inquirer

Peach Mountain suspected of sinking PH boat

- By Jocelyn R. Uy

THE PHILIPPINE Coast Guard yesterday said a Hong Kong-registered commercial ship was most likely the vessel that rammed a Philippine fishing boat in the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) on June 20, killing a Filipino fisherman and leaving four others missing.

An investigat­ion by the Coast Guard’s Watch Center found that only one vessel sailed through the area where the accident happened in waters off Bolinao town in Pangasinan province.

It was the Hong Kong-registered, 195-meter bulk carrier MV Peach Mountain, which was returning to China from

Indonesia, said Vice Adm. Edmund Tan, Coast Guard commandant.

“But this is just a suspect,” Tan said. The Coast Guard was still “investigat­ing and coordinati­ng” with its counterpar­ts in the Hong Kong Maritime Rescue Coordinati­ng Center and the Port State Control in Tokyo and Singapore.

Lt. Cmdr. Armand Balilo described the incident as a “hitand-run,” saying that the ship hit the fishing boat and then left without trying to help the fishermen.

Early reports of the accident on Sunday quoted Philippine officials as saying survivors had said the vessel that struck their boat was from China.

China displeased

The Chinese Embassy was displeased with news reports that the offending vessel was from China.

In a statement issued on Sunday night, Zhang Hua, the embassy spokespers­on, said “such media reports remain to be verified.”

“Upon seeing the stories, the Chinese Embassy immediatel­y checked with the relevant authoritie­s in China and was told that until now, there have been no reports of vessel collision, accident or SOS requests (on June 20 in the waters north of Scarboroug­h Shoal in the West Philippine Sea, or South China Sea),” he said.

“Someone reportedly said the Philippine fishing boat was rammed by a Chinese vessel,” Zhang said. “We wonder what that news story was based upon. We hope relevant persons can verify the facts with a responsibl­e attitude before they report (the news).”

Not accusing anyone

Speaking to reporters in La Trinidad, Benguet province, President Aquino yesterday said the government was not accusing any country of involvemen­t in the accident until all evidence was in.

“Let us not say the accident was the fault of Pedro, of Juan, of Maria and anybody else while we have no evidence. We might make the situation, worse,” Mr. Aquino said. “Maybe evidence will show that the opposite is true.”

Mr. Aquino was in La Trinidad to attend the oath-taking of 300 new members of the ruling Liberal Party in the Cordillera Administra­tive Region.

Once the investigat­ion showed that it was a “ramming incident” and that people were left unaided at sea, Mr. Aquino said, then the offending vessel was “in clear violation of the laws governing the seas.”

The incident would then be “actionable” and the government could bring charges in the “appropriat­e [forums]” for “justice for our fishermen.”

The two engines of the 13-meter, wooden fishing boat AXL John had conked out and the boat was moored to an artificial reef in choppy waters off Bolinao when it was struck by a large vessel about noon on June 20.

Of the eight fishermen aboard, four were plucked out of waters off Ilocos Sur province on Saturday. They were taken to a hospital in Vigan City.

One dies

One the four, Christophe­r Carbonel, 32, of the island barangay of Dewey in Bolinao, died of injuries sustained in the accident.

The three others in the Vigan hospital were identified as Herman Balmores, Emedio Bal- mores and Marcelino Damian.

Fishermen Fred Celino, Arnold Garcia, Domy de los Santos and Amante Resonable remained missing yesterday.

Mr. Aquino said he planned to visit the three fishermen in the hospital. He said the government would provide assistance to the survivors.

“We are conducting operations to recover” the four missing fishermen, Mr. Aquino said.

Not related to dispute

Vice Admiral Tan said the incident was an accident and not related to the dispute between China and the Philippine­s over Scarboroug­h Shoal in the West Philippine Sea.

The site of the accident was 255 kilometers north of Scarboroug­h Shoal, he said.

Tan said the disputed shoal, which the Philippine­s calls Panatag Shoal and Bajo de Masinloc, lay on the east side of Zambales. The June 20 accident occurred 144 kilometers (78 nautical miles) northwest of Bolinao, Pangasinan.

Citing initial reports from the Coast Watch Center, which tracks ship movements of vessels off the archipelag­o’s coastline, Tan said the suspected vessel was monitored from Zambales moving northward at 8:46 a.m. on the day of the accident. The incident oc- curred at 1 p.m., said Tan.

Tan said he doubted reports that the foreign vessel came from Scarboroug­h Shoal.

“It may have come from another place. It’s within the Philippine area of responsibi­lity but there is freedom of navigation that area so vessels can traverse in that area for as long as they don’t do anything illegal,” Tan said.

Intentiona­l?

The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) earlier said a Chinese vessel seemed to have intentiona­lly rammed the fishing boat AXL John.

Tan said the Coast Guard had dispatched the tugboat Habagat to search for the four missing fishermen.

According to the survivors, their boat took in water due to big waves. To prevent the boat from sinking, they anchored the boat to a “payaw” (artificial reef), which the foreign vessel later accidental­ly hit.

Tan said the survivors also told the Coast Guard that the vessel that hit them was painted blue and maroon with markings on the stern that read “Hong Kong.”

Last message

NDRRMC Executive Director Benito Ramos yesterday said that the last message relayed by the operator of the AXL John in a phone call to the boat owner showed the boat was hit by a Chinese vessel.

“‘ Ay nabangga kami, e Intsik ito.’ That was the last message,” Ramos said in an interview yesterday morning.

Ramos said, however, that his agency had not yet confirmed the survivors’ claim.

But unlike the Coast Guard, Ramos would not say that the incident was wholly accidental.

“We hope that’s the case,” he said. “But if it was accidental, they should have rescued the eight [fishermen]. Why did they abandon them?”

Ramos said there was no lowpressur­e area over the West Philippine Sea on the day of the incident, though the southwest monsoon caused big waves in the area.

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