MANILA – The Philippines effectively defied China’s provocative moves and warnings to cease sending supplies to Filipino soldiers stationed at Second Thomas Shoal, also known as Ayungin Shoal, an atoll in the Spratly Islands of the South China Sea, 105 nautical miles west of Palawan.
Philippine
Navy and Coast Guards vessels escorted a civilian boat recently and completed
its mission in delivering supplies to marine soldiers in BRP Sierra Madre.
Filipino
security officials said Chinese Coast Guard vessels tried, but failed to stop
the civilian boat and its escorts from reaching the shoal which is being
claimed by China.
Not backing out
Army
Colonel Medel Aguilar, a spokesman of the Armed Forces of the Philippines
(AFP), said that the military is committed to ensuring the safety and
well-being of soldiers deployed in BRP Sierra Madre.
“The
supply mission for the AFP personnel is intended to maintain the country’s
presence in the Ayungin Shoal and to exercise its sovereign rights and
jurisdiction based on international law to ensure regional peace and
stability,” he said.
“Let me
also add that we have a special message to the China Coast Guard for them to
behave. They should not do any action that will endanger people’s lives. For
all the consequences that the singular acts will cause, the blame will be on
them and on the authorities above them, so they should behave,” he added.
Aguilar
pointed out that the Ayungin Shoal holds a strategic importance for the
Philippines and is a vital fishing ground for Filipino fishermen.
Beyond
its practical purpose, the roll-on/roll-off (Ro-Ro) mission to the shoal is a
clear demonstration of the country’s resolve to stand up against threats and
coercion and its commitment in upholding the rule of law, he said.
“As we
continue to pursue this humanitarian undertaking and defend our rights [in] our
maritime shoals, we also affirm our support for the peaceful settlement of
disputes,” Medel said. “We call on all relevant parties to abide by (their)
obligations under international law and respect the Philippines’ sovereign
rights and jurisdiction over its maritime source.”
A
resupply mission last August 5 was subjected to dangerous maneuvers by the
China Coast Guard firing water cannons to Filipino boats heading to Ayungin
Shoal, putting the lives of the crew of the vessels at risk.
The
members of the international community, particularly the Philippines’ allies,
also condemned China’s actions.
U.S. support
U.S.
Secretary Austin has warned Beijing and reaffirmed that the Mutual Defense
Treaty extends to Philippine public vessels, aircraft, and armed forces - to
include those of its Coast Guard - in the Pacific, including in the South China
Sea.
Austin,
who recently spoke today with Philippine Defense Secretary Gilberto
Teodoro Jr. by phone and discussed U.S.-Philippines alliance cooperation.
Both Secretaries reaffirmed the ironclad nature of the U.S.-Philippines
alliance and committed to redouble efforts to strengthen bilateral training,
interoperability, and support for the modernization of the AFP.
Austin
condemned the China Coast Guard's use of water cannons and other dangerous
maneuvers, which put the safety of Philippine vessels and crew at risk.
He joined numerous countries in expressing concern about these unsafe
operational activities, which undermine the status quo and directly
threaten regional peace and stability.
Both
Austin and Teodoro reaffirmed their shared commitment to upholding the
rules-based order, including supporting the Philippines' right to conduct
lawful maritime activities, consistent with the 2016 Arbitral Tribunal Ruling,
which is final and binding on all parties.
They
also committed to find a near-term opportunity to meet in-person and restated
their commitment to stand shoulder-to-shoulder as allies to bring security,
prosperity, and stability to the Indo-Pacific region and beyond.
Marcos
Beijing demanded the Philippines
remove the BRP Sierra Madre used as an occupied base from the disputed shoal,
but President Ferdinand Marcos stood firm that the country will continue
to assert its sovereignty over the territory.
Marcos held a
command conference this month with senior defense and military officials in a
bid to come up with a comprehensive action to respond to China’s dangerous
maneuvers and illegal use of water cannons against the Philippine Coast Guard
vessels in Ayungin Shoal.
The Sierra
Madre had been run aground intentionally on May 9, 1997 to serve as an
outpost to boost the Philippines’ claim to sovereignty over the Spratly
islands.
China claims
ownership over virtually the entire strategic waterway despite international
rulings that have invalidated Beijing’s vast territorial claims, such as that
of 2016 by the Permanent Court of Arbitration, an international body based in
The Hague.
Tensions between
China and the Philippines over the South China Sea have risen since Marcos took
office last year and moved Manila back towards its longtime ally the United
States, reversing the direction taken by his predecessor Rodrigo Duterte.
“We continue to
assert our sovereignty. We continue to assert our territorial rights in the
face of all of these challenges and are consistent with the international law
and UNCLOS especially,” Marcos said, referring to the United Nations Convention
on the Law of the Sea. “So, that has always been our stand. But we still have
to keep communicating with the Chinese government, with President Xi, with
Beijing. We still have to keep communicating with them because we need to
really come to a conclusion.”
The Chinese
attack on the Philippine vessels came weeks after Duterte went to China on his
own to speak to Xi, but details of the meeting were not made public either by
the former president or Beijing.
OFWs threatened
Last April, Chinese ambassador to Manila, Huang Xilian, accused the
Philippines of “stoking the fire” of regional tensions by offering expanded
military base access to the U.S., saying that the goal was to interfere in
China’s affairs with Taiwan.
China’s ruling Communist Party has never controlled Taiwan but claims the
self-ruled island democracy as its own and has repeatedly refused to rule out
taking it by force, a threat which Manila perceives as reason to ramp up its
guard with help from Washington.
Huang also appeared to threaten overseas Filipino workers in Taiwan,
which prompted a backlash in the Philippines. “The Philippines is advised to
unequivocally oppose ‘Taiwan independence’ rather than stoking the fire by
offering the US access to the military bases near the Taiwan Strait, if you
care genuinely about the 150,000 OFWs,” Huang said. (Mindanao Examiner, AFP,
CNN, VOA)





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