Philippines to tighten guard at locations in South China Sea
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[May 13, 2024]
By Karen Lema
MANILA/BEIJING (Reuters) -The Philippines said on Monday it would keep a
closer guard on reefs, shoals and islets in its exclusive economic zone
in the South China Sea, alarmed by reports of new reclamation activities
by China, which Beijing denied.
The Philippine Coast Guard said on Saturday it had deployed a ship to
Sabina Shoal on the Spratly archipelago, where it accused China of
building an artificial island, having documented what it said were piles
of dead and crushed coral on the sandbars.
Jonathan Malaya, spokesperson of the National Security Council (NSC),
said NSC chief Eduardo Ano had ordered a tighter guard at locations
within Manila's 200-nautical mile economic zone, as a long-standing
diplomatic row with Beijing intensifies.
"No one will guard (these locations) except us. It is our responsibility
under international law to guard (them) and ensure that the environment
there would not be damaged and that there won't be reclamation
activities," Malaya told a regular television program.
China claims almost all the South China Sea, including parts claimed by
the Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam, and has carried
out extensive land reclamation on some islands, building military
facilities, causing concern in Washington and the region.
China's foreign ministry on Monday dismissed Manila's latest accusation
as "groundless and pure rumor".
"Recently, the Philippine side has repeatedly spread rumors,
deliberately smeared China and attempted to mislead the international
community, which is futile," spokesperson Wang Wenbin told a regular
briefing.
He urged Manila to "return to the right track of properly settling
maritime disputes through negotiation and consultation".
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Commodore Jay Tarriela, Philippine Coast Guard spokesperson for the
West Philippine Sea, speaks to the press during a joint news
conference in response to the recent aggression of the Chinese Coast
Guard against Philippine vessels in the South China Sea, at the
Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila, Philippines, August 07,
2023. Ezra Acayan/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Philippine Coast Guard spokesperson Jay Tarriela said its presence
at the Escoda shoal had deterred China from doing small-scale
reclamation, but that scientists would have to determine whether the
piles of coral were natural or man-made.
He said the coast guard was committed to maintaining a presence at
the shoal, just over 120 nautical miles from the Philippine province
of Palawan.
The Permanent Court of Arbitration ruled in 2016 that Beijing's
claims in the South China Sea, a vital waterway, had no basis under
international law, a decision that China rejects.
The Sabina Shoal, known locally as Escoda, is the rendezvous point
for vessels resupplying Filipino troops stationed on a grounded
warship at the Second Thomas Shoal, where Manila and China have had
frequent run-ins.
Ano has called for Chinese diplomats to be expelled over the alleged
leak of a phone conversation with a Filipino admiral about the
maritime dispute.
On Monday, the Philippine foreign ministry said it would look into
reports of "illegal and unlawful activities" by diplomatic
officials, but did not name China.
(Additional reporting by Liz Lee in Beijing; Editing by John Mair,
Stephen Coates and Kevin Liffey)
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