Philippines protests China's 'illegal' South China Sea presence
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[May 29, 2021]
MANILA (Reuters) - The Philippines
has protested China's continuing "illegal presence and activities" near
an island in the South China Sea held by the Southeast Asian nation, the
foreign ministry said on Saturday.
Manila lodged the diplomatic protest on Friday over the "incessant
deployment, prolonged presence, and illegal activities of Chinese
maritime assets and fishing vessels" in the vicinity of Thitu island.
It demanded its giant neighbour withdraw the vessels.
The Chinese embassy in Manila did not immediately respond to a request
for comment outside business hours.
Tensions between Manila and Beijing have escalated over the months-long
presence of hundreds of Chinese boats in the Philippines' 200-mile
exclusive economic zone. The Philippines says it believes the vessels
were manned by militia, while Beijing has said they were fishing boats
sheltering from bad weather.
"The Pag-asa Islands is an integral part of the Philippines over which
it has sovereignty and jurisdiction," the foreign ministry said in a
statement.
Thitu, known as Pag-asa in the Philippines, is 451 km (280 miles) from
the mainland and is the biggest of the eight reefs, shoals and islands
it occupies in the Spratly archipelago.
China has built a mini-city with runways, hangars and
surface-to-air-missiles in the Subi Reef about 25 km (15 miles) from
Thitu.
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Philippine Coast Guard personnel survey several ships believed to be
Chinese militia vessels in Sabina Shoal in the South China Sea, in a
handout photo distributed by the Philippine Coast Guard on May 5 and
taken according to source on April 27, 2021. Philippine Coast
Guard/Handout via REUTERS
This was at least the 84th diplomatic protest the
Philippines has filed against China since President Rodrigo Duterte
took office in 2016.
An international tribunal that year invalidated China's expansive
claim in the South China Sea, where about $3 trillion worth of
ship-borne trade passes annually. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Taiwan and Vietnam also have competing claims to various islands and
features in the area.
Duterte shelved the favourable ruling and pursued a rapprochement
with Beijing in exchange for pledges of billions of dollars of
loans, aid and investment, much of which are pending.
(Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales; Editing by William Mallard)
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