The Philippines said China’s deployment of its largest coast guard vessel inside Manila’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) was alarming and clearly meant to intimidate fishermen operating around a contested shoal in the South China Sea.
“We were surprised about the increasing aggression being showed by the People’s Republic of China in deploying the monster ship,” National Security Council spokesperson Jonathan Malaya said in a press conference on Tuesday.
Manila has lodged a protest over the presence of the 165 m (541 ft) long Chinese coast guard vessel 5901, which was spotted 77 nautical miles off the coast of Zambales province. Malaya said Manila demanded its withdrawal from the EEZ.
“It is an escalation and provocative,” Malaya said, saying the presence of the vessel was “illegal” and “unacceptable”.
The Philippine Coast Guard said it had deployed two of its largest vessels to drive away the Chinese vessel.
On Monday, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said that its coast guard’s “patrol and law enforcement activities” were “reasonable, lawful and beyond reproach”.
Tensions between the Philippines, a U.S. treaty ally, and Beijing have escalated over the past two years due to overlapping claims in the South China Sea.
In 2016, an international tribunal ruled China’s claims to large swathes of the disputed waterway had no basis, a decision Beijing rejected.
China’s expansive claims overlap with the EEZs of Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam. The disputed waterway is a strategic shipping route through which about $3 trillion of annual commerce moves.
A former senior aide to Donald Trump claimed China had tapped the president-elect’s phone, stolen…
In a surprising turn of events, Efi Kakarantzoula, the woman responsible for the vitriol attack…
METLEN Energy & Metals has announced a €295.5 million investment to develop an integrated production…
The UN Security Council has adopted a resolution co-authored by Greece and the United States,…
My House II" (Σπίτι Μου 2) program has seen a remarkable influx of over 6,000…
Džumhur and Tsitsipas Advance to Second Round of Australian Open Doubles** In an intense and…