Bangkok Post

Duterte backs China over sea collision

-

MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is standing by China over a collision involving the two nations’ boats in the South China Sea, with his spokesman casting doubts on local fishermen’s accounts of the incident.

In his first public statement about what he described as a “maritime incident”, Mr Duterte said China’s side should be heard on the collision that resulted in a Philippine vessel carrying 22 fishermen sinking in disputed waters on June 9. The crew were rescued by a Vietnamese fishing boat and a Philippine navy ship.

“It is best investigat­ed. I don’t issue a statement now because there’s no investigat­ion and no result,” Mr Duterte said in a speech at a Philippine navy event on Monday night. “The only thing we can do is wait and give the other party the right to be heard.”

The Philippine­s will not escalate tensions with China by sending military ships to the South China Sea following the collision, he added, reiteratin­g his nation isn’t ready to go to war with Beijing.

At a briefing yesterday, Mr Duterte’s spokesman Salvador Panelo said there are “circumstan­ces that give doubt to the version” of the Filipino fishermen, including how most of them were asleep when the collision happened.

“The president doesn’t want this to be blown into an internatio­nal crisis,” Mr Panelo said. “We are being careful because there will be repercussi­ons if we make the wrong move.”

Mr Duterte stuck to his pro-China stance despite calls from the opposition, led by Vice President Leni Robredo, to change his “passive” China policy by actively asserting the nation’s rights in the disputed waters.

Mr Duterte now has to convince the public that friendly ties with China is still the way to go, said Jay Batongbaca­l, director of the University of the Philippine­s’ Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea.

“Between the Philippine government and the Chinese government the friendship policy has been set, but this incident has happened and casts doubt on the sincerity and wisdom of it to the Filipino people,” Mr Batongbaca­l said.

 ?? AFP ?? Activists burn Chinese flags at a protest in Manila yesterday.
AFP Activists burn Chinese flags at a protest in Manila yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand