Chinese navy helicopter flies within 10 feet of Philippine patrol plane
over disputed shoal
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[February 18, 2025]
By JOEAL CALUPITAN
OVER THE SCARBOROUGH SHOAL, South China Sea (AP) — A Chinese navy
helicopter flew within 10 feet (3 meters) of a Philippine patrol plane
on Tuesday in a disputed area of the South China Sea, prompting the
Filipino pilot to warn by radio: “You are flying too close, you are very
dangerous."
The Chinese helicopter was attempting to force a Cessna Caravan
turboprop plane belonging to the Philippine Bureau of Fisheries and
Aquatic Resources out of what China claims is its airspace over the
hotly disputed Scarborough Shoal off the northwestern Philippines.
An Associated Press journalist and other invited foreign media on the
plane witnessed the tense 30-minute standoff as the Philippine plane
pressed on with its low-altitude patrol around Scarborough with the
Chinese navy helicopter hovering close above it or flying to its left in
cloudy weather.
“You are flying too close, you are very dangerous and endangering the
lives of our crew and passengers,” the Philippine pilot told the Chinese
navy helicopter by radio at one point. “Keep away and distance your
aircraft from us, you are violating the safety standard set by FAA and
ICAO.”
The pilot was referring to the standard distance between aircraft
required by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and the
International Civil Aviation Organization to prevent air disasters.
There was no sign that the Philippine plane had to alter its planned
path and altitude to avoid a collision.
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The Philippine Coast Guard and the Bureau of Fisheries said in a
statement that they remain “committed to asserting our sovereignty,
sovereign rights and maritime jurisdiction in the West Philippine Sea,
despite the aggressive and escalatory actions of China."
They referred to the Philippine name for the stretch of waters in the
South China Sea closer to the Philippines’ western coast.
The Chinese military, referring to Scarborough Shoal by its Chinese
name, said the plane had “illegally entered the airspace of China’s
Huangyan Island without the Chinese government’s permission."
The Chinese Southern Theater Command organized naval and air forces to
track and warn the plane away, Senior Col. Tian Junli, spokesperson for
the command, said in a written statement posted online.
The Philippines “confused right and wrong and spread false narratives,”
the statement said.
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A Chinese military helicopter flies close to a Philippine Bureau of
Fisheries and Aquatic (BFAR) aircraft above Scarborough shoal on
Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Joeal Calupitan)
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Tuesday's encounter, which is expected to be protested by the
Philippine government, is the latest flashpoint in a decades-long
territorial standoff in one of the world’s busiest trade routes,
which involves China, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and
Taiwan .
Confrontations on the high seas have spiked between Chinese and
Philippine coast guards in the last two years at Scarborough and
Second Thomas Shoal, where a grounded Philippine navy ship has
served as a military territorial outpost since 1999 but has since
been closely surrounded by Chinese coast guard, navy and other
ships.
China deployed its naval force around Scarborough after a tense
standoff with Philippine ships in 2012.
The following year, the Philippines brought its disputes with China
to international arbitration. A 2016 decision by a United
Nations-backed arbitration panel invalidated China’s expansive claim
in the South China Sea based on the U.N. Convention on the Law of
the Sea.
China, a signatory to the UNCLOS like the Philippines, refused to
participate in the arbitration, rejected its outcome and continues
to defy it.
Faced by China's military might, the Philippines under President
Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has resorted to a shame campaign — embedding
Philippine and foreign journalists in its sea and air patrols in a
bid to expose Beijing's increasingly assertive actions.
The Philippines has also been strengthening its security alliances
with the United States, Japan, Australian, France, Canada, the
European Union and other Western countries to shore up its external
defense.
The United States says it's obligated to defend the Philippines, its
oldest treaty ally in Asia, if Filipino forces, ships and aircraft
come under an armed attack, including in the South China Sea. China
has warned the U.S. and its allies not to meddle in what it calls a
purely Asian dispute.
___
Associated Press writers Jim Gomez in Manila, Philippines, and Ken
Moritsugu in Beijing contributed to this report.
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