03 December 2023

NEWS RANT: The South China Sea is at the centre of a territorial dispute between China, the Philippines and other countries

Philippines accuses China of swarming reef in South China Sea

By Vicky WongBBC News
Reuters Dozens of Chinese militia boats in the South China SeaReuters
Photo supplied by the Philippine Coast Guard showing Chinese militia boats operating in Whitsun Reef

The Philippines has accused China of "swarming" a reef off its coast after more than 135 military boats were spotted in the South China Sea.

The coast guard said the boats were "dispersed and scattered" in the vicinity of Whitsun Reef, which it says is within its exclusive economic zone.
They said the growing presence of these military boats was "alarming".
The South China Sea is at the centre of a territorial dispute between China, the Philippines and other countries.
Whitsun Reef - which the Philippines calls Julian Felipe Reef - is around 320km (200 miles) west of Palawan Island, more than 1,000km from the nearest major Chinese landmass of Hainan island.
The Philippines' Coast Guard said the number of Chinese maritime militia vessels in the area had increased from the 111 they recorded in November. There has been no response from China.
Friction between the two countries over competing sovereignty claims has increased since Ferdinand Marcos Jr became president last year.
Last week, the Philippines carried out two separate joint air and sea patrols with the US, and with Australia a few days earlier.
An international tribunal invalidated China's claim to 90% of the South China Sea in 2016, but Beijing does not recognise the ruling and has been building islands in the disputed waters in recent years.
The contested waters have also become a naval flashpoint for China-US relations, and in October, US President Joe Biden warned that the US will defend the Philippines in case of any attack.
President Biden's comments were made days after two collisions between Filipino and Chinese vessels in the waters.
Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam, and Brunei also claim parts of the sea. 
2 hours ago — The Philippines has accused China of "swarming" a reef off its coast after more than 135 military boats were spotted in the South China Sea.
2 hours ago — Chinese vessels gather near Whitsun Reef in disputed waters of the South China Sea on Saturday. The Philippines said Sunday that more than 135 ...
2 hours ago — The Chinese boats were dispersed and scattered within the boomerang shaped Whitsun Reef, which the Philippines calls Julian Felipe Reef, around ...
Sep 22, 2023 — Vibrant reefs filled with colorful fish and seaweed just two years ago have been turned into a wasteland of crushed corals in the South ...

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Philippines accuses Chinese vessels of ‘swarming’ reef off its coast

More than 135 Chinese vessels seen near Whitsun Reef in the South China Sea, the Philippines coastguard says.

More than 135 Chinese vessels were “swarming” a reef off the coast of the Philippines in the South China Sea, the Philippines coastguard said on Sunday, amid renewed tensions between the two countries.
Coastguard officials described the growing number of boats off the coast of Whitsun Reef, which the Philippines calls Julian Felipe Reef, as an “alarming development”, on Sunday.
The number of Chinese maritime vessels has increased in the past few weeks. When the coastguard deployed two patrol boats to the area, officials noted the number had increased to 135 boats, from the counted 111 on November 13.
  • “No response was made to the radio challenges issued by the PCG [Philippines Coast Guard] to the CMM vessels which is now estimated to have grown to more than 135 vessels dispersed and scattered within Julian Felipe Reef,” the Manila’s coastguard said.
  • The Chinese boats were “dispersed and scattered” within the boomerang-shaped Whitsun Reef more than 1,000km (620 miles) from the nearest major Chinese landmass of Hainan island, and around 320km (200 miles) west of Palawan island of the Philippines.
Beijing claims most of the South China Sea, including waters and islands close to the shores of its neighbours, and has ignored an international tribunal decision that its assertion has no legal basis.
  • The Philippines, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam have also staked claims to various islands and reefs in the sea, which is believed to have rich petroleum reserves deep beneath its waters.
This year, China and the Philippines have been involved in a number of incidents, with Manila accusing Beijing of making aggressive efforts to assert its claim to almost the entire South China Sea under its so-called nine-dash line.
  • Earlier this month, the two countries’ ships were involved in near collisions close to Second Thomas Shoal, which also lies within Manila’s  exclusive economic zone (EEZ). 
  • Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), that zone extends 200 nautical miles (about 370km) from a country’s coast.
The Philippines took its case to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, when China seized control of Scarborough Shoal.
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Although the court ruled in the favour of the Philippines, Beijing did not recognise the ruling and stepped up its claims to the waters building artificial islands, expanding military outposts and deploying its coastguard, maritime militia and fishing fleet.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES
Philippines accuses Chinese vessels of 'swarming' reef off its coast | South  China Sea News | Al Jazeera
Philippines Accuses China Of Swarming Reef Off Its Coast After Monitoring  135 Illegal Chinese Vessels | World News, Times Now
Filipino coast guard builds station in contested South China Sea
Chinese Patrols in Disputed Sea Hit New Peak Amid Tensions - Bloomberg

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