A Chinese Coast Guard vessel fires her water cannon toward a Philippine Coast Guard vessel in the vicinity of Ayungin Shoal. | Photo courtesy: Philippine Coast Guard Facebook page
The Philippine Coast Guard said one of its ships was damaged Tuesday in a collision with a China Coast Guard vessel during a resupply mission to Filipino troops on a remote outpost in the South China Sea.
It is the latest incident in waters around Second Thomas Shoal in the Spratly Islands where the countries have contested maritime claims.
Chinese coast guard and other vessels undertook “dangerous maneuvers and blocking”, leading to a collision that resulted in “minor structural damage to the PCG (Philippine Coast Guard) vessel,” Philippine Coast Guard Commodore Jay Tarriela said in a post on social media platform X.
The BRP Sindangan, along with a sister ship, had been deployed “to support” a military rotation and resupply mission to Second Thomas Shoal, where Filipino troops are stationed on a grounded Philippine navy vessel.
China’s coast guard said it “took control measures” against Philippines ships’ “illegal intrusion” in waters around Ren’ai Reef in China’s Nansha Islands,” using the Chinese names for the shoal.
China claims almost the entire South China Sea, brushing aside competing claims from a host of Southeast Asian nations and an international ruling that declared its stance baseless.
The incident comes a day after Philippine Foreign Minister Enrique Manalo called on China to “stop harassing us” as he defended Manila’s strategy of publicizing Chinese maneuvers in the South China Sea.
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos was similarly forthright when he appeared later Monday evening at an event hosted by an Australian think tank.
“We shall never surrender even a square inch of our territory and our maritime jurisdiction,” he said on the sidelines of the ASEAN summit in Melbourne.
The collision was the second such incident since December, when Chinese ships blasted water cannons at Philippine boats.
Those confrontations were the most intense between Philippine and Chinese vessels in years, analysts said at the time, predicting that there would be an escalation in tensions.
Relations between Manila and Beijing have frayed under Marcos, who has sought to improve ties with traditional ally Washington and deepen defense cooperation in the region, while also pushing back against Chinese actions in the South China Sea.
That contrasts with the approach of former president Rodrigo Duterte, who set aside maritime disputes with Beijing in exchange for promises of Chinese investment.
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