Philippine Daily Inquirer

Chinese sea militia harassing vessels

- —STORY BY FRANCES MANGOSING

While the vessels look like fishing boats, China’s maritime militia should not be taken lightly, said Gregory Poling, director of Asia Maritime Transparen­cy Initiative. They intimidate the vessels of other claimants in the South China Sea, including the Philippine­s, he said. Satellite image of the Philippine-claimed Zamora Reef (Subi Reef) taken in August showed 20 boats in the lagoon in one day.

The naval and Coast Guard vessels of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) have consistent­ly drawn attention in the heavily disputed South China Sea, especially with the completion of military bases on artificial islands that China has built on Philippine-claimed reefs in the Spratly archipelag­o.

What has not often drawn attention is the presence in the region of China’s maritime militia.

While the vessels look like fishing boats, they should not be taken lightly, said Gregory Poling, director of Asia Maritime Transparen­cy Initiative and a fellow at Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington.

Force for intimidati­on

They intimidate the vessels of other claimants in the South China Sea, including the Philippine­s, Poling said.

“What Beijing has done in the past several years is to estab- lish 24/7 constant presence of naval and Coast Guard vessels, as well as paramilita­ry militia throughout the South China Sea in a way that was unpreceden­ted just four or five years ago,” Poling told a security forum in Makati City, on Friday.

Despite losing to a Philippine challenge in the UNbacked Permanent Court of Ar- bitration in July 2016, China insists it owns almost all of the South China Sea, including waters close to the shores of the other claimants in the strategic waterway.

Besides the Philippine­s, Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and Taiwan also claim parts of the South China Sea.

To reinforce its sweeping claim, China has built artificial islands on seven Philippine­claimed reefs in the Spratly archipelag­o and developed on these military bases equipped with antiship missiles and surface-to-air missiles.

Amistake

“I mentioned the maritime militia, the paramilita­ry forces or how we’d like to categorize them. I think we have an impression that this is relatively minor part of the Chinese arsenal, and we are at a mistake,” he said.

Poling presented a satellite image of Philippine-claimed Zamora (internatio­nal name: Subi) Reef taken in August, showing about 200 boats in the lagoon in just a single day.

The boats are 51 meters long on the average, much larger than the fishing boats of the Philippine­s and other claimants in the South China Sea.

“None of these boats are actually fishing, everyone appeared as maritime militia. When we tracked them ... we never see them doing anything other than intimidati­ng others,” Poling said.

He said the boats often left the lagoon and hanged out around Pagasa (Thitu) Island for days and weeks to intimidate resupply missions to the Philippine-occupied island in the Spratly archipelag­o.

Pagasa, the largest island occupied by the Philippine­s in the Spratlys, is located just 22 kilometers from Zamora Reef.

Philippine village

The island, located 280 km northwest of Puerto Princesa City, is a single village, which is part of the municipali­ty of Kalayaan in Palawan.

The seat of government of Kalayaan, Pagasa has an airstrip, a five-bed lying-in clinic and a small elementary school for the children of the islanders.

In its annual report to the US Congress, the Pentagon defines China’s maritime militia as “an armed force of civilians available for mobilizati­on” and the “only government-sanctioned maritime militia in the world.”

The work conducted by the People’s Armed Forces Maritime Militia (PAFMM) allowed China to pursue its objectives in the disputed waters without risking conflict, the report said.

“In the South China Sea, the PAFMM play a major role in coercive activities to achieve China’s political goals without fighting, part of broader PRC military doctrine stating confrontat­ional operations short of war can be an effective means of accomplish­ing political objectives,” it said.

“In the past, the PAFMM rented fishing vessels from companies or individual fishermen, but China has built a state-owned fishing fleet for at least part of its maritime militia force in the South China Sea,” the report added.

The Pentagon said some of the incidents in which the militia played a significan­t role were the 2012 standoff with the Philippine Navy and Philippine Coast Guard at Panatag (Scarboroug­h) Shoal, large surge of ships near the Senkakus in 2016 and the patrol of Sandy Cay near Pagasa in August last year.

 ??  ??
 ?? TRANSPAREN­CY INITIATIVE —PHOTO FROMASIAMA­RITIME ?? ARTIFICIAL ISLE This satellite photo shows Zamora (Subi) Reef with fishing boats in its lagoon.
TRANSPAREN­CY INITIATIVE —PHOTO FROMASIAMA­RITIME ARTIFICIAL ISLE This satellite photo shows Zamora (Subi) Reef with fishing boats in its lagoon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines