Defense chief rules out MDT, says collision an ‘accident’
DEFENSE Secretary Delfin Lorenzana ruled out on Wednesday, June 19, suggestions to invoke the Mutual Defense Treaty (MDT) with the United States, saying the collision between a Chinese vessel and a Filipino fishing boat was an “accident”.
“I think it’s just an accident, based on information we got from the crew. Maybe the other side did not intend to bump them. ‘Yun nga lang, iniwanan (nila ang mga Filipino fishermen),” he said in a forum in Manila on Wednesday.
Lorenzana was the first to condemn the Chinese for abandoning the
Filipino fishermen after their fishing boat F/B Gemver sustained major damage and sank near the Recto Bank, known internationally as Reed Bank, in the West Philippine Sea.
He said, however, that he does not think it proper to invoke MDT which, he said, is only for armed attack.
“MDT kasi is for armed attack. This one is not armed attack. It’s purely an accident,” Lorenzana said.
Under MDT, both the US and the Philippines are obliged to respond if any of their vessels, either military or civilian, are attacked in the South China Sea.
Recto Bank is still within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone but is also claimed by China, which is invoking the nine-dash line.
Despite a Permanent Court of Arbitration ruling on July 12, 2016 that said China has no legal basis to claim the area and that it had violated the Philippines’ sovereign rights, Chinese fishing boats have continued to operate in the area. On June 9, 2019, F/B Gemver was anchored near Recto Bank when it was hit by a Chinese purse seine vessel. The Filipino boat was heavily damaged and sank.
Instead of rescuing the 22 Filipino fishermen, the Chinese fishermen fled the area. China later claimed they left because they were scared of being besieged by Filipinos.
Vietnamese fishermen later found the Filipinos clinging on to plastic barrels and pieces of wood from their damaged boat.