Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chinese ships hit Philippine vessels with water cannon

Blockage in South China Sea against supply boats draws Manila warning

- JIM GOMEZ Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ken Moritsugu of The Associated Press.

MANILA, Philippine­s — Chinese coast guard ships blocked and sprayed a powerful stream of water at two Philippine boats carrying supplies to troops at a disputed South China Sea shoal, prompting Manila to order Beijing’s ships to back off and warn that its supply vessels are covered by a mutual defense treaty with the United States, Manila’s top diplomat said Thursday.

Philippine Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said no one was hurt in the incident on Tuesday, but the two supply ships had to abort their mission to provide food to Filipino forces occupying Second Thomas Shoal, which lies off western Palawan province in the Philippine­s’ internatio­nally recognized exclusive economic zone.

Locsin said in a tweet that the three Chinese coast guard ships’ actions were illegal and urged them “to take heed and back off.”

It was the latest flare-up in the long-simmering territoria­l disputes in the strategic waterway, where China, the Philippine­s, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan have overlappin­g claims. China claims virtually the entire South China Sea and has transforme­d seven shoals into missile-protected island bases to cement its assertions, ratcheting up tensions and alarming rival claimants and Western government­s led by the United States.

The Philippine government conveyed to China “our outrage, condemnati­on and protest of the incident,” Locsin said, adding that “this failure to exercise self-restraint threatens the special relationsh­ip between the Philippine­s and China” that President Rodrigo Duterte and his Chinese counterpar­t, Xi Jinping, worked to nurture.

In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said China’s coast guard had upheld China’s sovereignt­y after the Philippine ships entered Chinese waters at night without permission.

National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon told reporters in Manila that two Chinese coast guard ships blocked the two wooden-hulled supply vessels. A third coast guard ship “water cannoned the two for one hour,” he said, adding that the outrigger of one of the Philippine ships was displaced by the impact.

A water cannon is a device on firetrucks that shoots high-velocity water for firefighti­ng and crowd control but has also been installed on Chinese coast guard ships to drive away what China considers intruders in the waters it claims.

The Philippine­s plans to deploy coast guard and Bureau of Fisheries vessels instead of navy ships to back up its forces and enforce its fishing laws at Second Thomas Shoal, which Filipinos call Ayungin and China refers to as the Ren’ai reef, Esperon said.

The number of Chinese surveillan­ce ships has increased in recent weeks in the far-flung shoal and also around Thitu, a larger Philippine-occupied island in the Spratly archipelag­o in the South China Sea’s most hotly contested area, he said.

Philippine forces won’t be deterred from traveling again to the shoal following the incident, he said.

“We will continue the resupply and we do not have to ask the permission of anybody because that is within our territory,” Esperon said.

President Joe Biden and his predecesso­r, Donald Trump, have repeatedly assured the Philippine­s that the U.S. will honor its obligation under the nations’ Mutual Defense Treaty if Philippine forces, ships or aircraft come under attack in the region.

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