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China and the Philippines have again accused each other of illegal behaviour over the Second Thomas Shoal. Weeks earlier, on October 4, a Chinese coastguard ship (left) is pictured with a Chinese militia vessel (right) blocking the Philippine coast guard ship BRP Sindangan. Photo: AP

South China Sea: China Coast Guard says its ‘special arrangements’ allow Philippines to supply Second Thomas Shoal base

  • Beijing accuses Philippine supply ships of violating China’s territorial sovereignty
  • Manila counters that China’s coastguard fired a water cannon ‘in an illegal though unsuccessful attempt’ to force Philippine ships to alter course
China’s coastguard has made “temporary special arrangements” for Philippine ships to supply their base in the disputed Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea, according to China.

Gan Yu, a spokesman for the China Coast Guard, said on Friday three Philippine coastguard ships and two cargo vessels made an “unapproved entry” into the disputed waters.

He said the coastguard followed and took control measures against the Philippine vessels and made “temporary special arrangements for the Philippines to transport food and other necessary daily supplies”.

02:03

Beijing and Manila trade blame over ‘provocative’ moves with ship collisions near disputed shoal

Beijing and Manila trade blame over ‘provocative’ moves with ship collisions near disputed shoal

“The Philippines’ actions violate China’s territorial sovereignty, violate the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, and violate its own commitments. We urge the Philippines to immediately stop its infringing actions,” Gan said.

“The China Coast Guard will continue to carry out rights protection and law enforcement activities in waters under China’s jurisdiction in accordance with the law and resolutely safeguard national sovereignty and maritime rights and interests.”

In response, the Philippines accused China’s coastguard of firing a water cannon at a boat on a resupply mission to Philippine troops at Second Thomas Shoal, but it said China’s deterrence efforts were unsuccessful.

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“CCG vessel 5203 deployed water cannon against Philippine supply vessel M/L Kalayaan in an illegal though unsuccessful attempt to force the latter to alter course,” a Philippine government task force said on Friday.

China Coast Guard had earlier used water cannons on Philippine vessels during a confrontation near the atoll in early August. Manila said Beijing’s action was “illegal” and “dangerous”, and its foreign ministry summoned the Chinese ambassador to the Philippines as a protest against the incident.
The most recent clash between the two nations’ coastguards comes about three weeks after Chinese Coast Guard ships collided with Philippine vessels in an attempt to blockade their passage towards Second Thomas Shoal. The Philippines has said there were no injuries among its personnel and the resupply mission was successful.

14:15

Livelihoods lost: The fishermen snared in the Scarborough Shoal dispute

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Since Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr came to power in 2022, Manila has been pursuing closer ties with its traditional ally, the United States, while tensions with China have been increasing over the territorial dispute in the South China Sea. The Marcos government has filed more than 120 diplomatic protests against Beijing’s actions in the disputed water.

Second Thomas Shoal – known as Renai Reef in China and Ayungin Shoal in the Philippines – is controlled by Manila but also claimed by Beijing, Taipei and Hanoi. It is within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone, about 190km (120 miles) from the island of Palawan.

The Philippines has outposts on nine reefs and islands in the Spratly Islands – called Nansha in Chinese – including Second Thomas Shoal.

Why is a rusty old Philippine warship involved in the South China Sea dispute?

Manila deliberately grounded the BRP Sierra Madre – a US-made tank-landing ship from World War II – on the shoal in 1999 to contain China’s advance in the waters after China occupied nearby Mischief Reef.

Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea, including the Spratlys, where the Philippines and other Southeast Asian nations have overlapping claims.

China rejected an international ruling in 2016 that its territorial and maritime claims have no legal basis while building military outposts on islands and atolls that it controls.
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