Current:Home > StocksPhilippines vows to remove floating barrier placed by China’s coast guard at a disputed lagoon -Blueprint Wealth Network
Philippines vows to remove floating barrier placed by China’s coast guard at a disputed lagoon
View
Date:2025-04-15 11:10:08
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Philippine officials vowed Monday to remove a floating barrier placed by China’s coast guard to prevent Filipino fishing boats from entering a disputed lagoon in the South China Sea.
They said the 300-meter (980-foot) -long barrier at the entrance to the lagoon at Scarborough Shoal is “illegal and illegitimate.” Chinese coast guard vessels laid the barrier, held up by buoys, on Friday as a Philippine government fisheries vessel approached. More than 50 Philippine fishing boats were outside the shoal at the time, the Philippine coast guard said.
“We condemn the installation of floating barriers by the Chinese coast guard,” Philippine National Security Adviser Eduardo Ano said. “The placement by the People’s Republic of China of a barrier violates the traditional fishing rights of our fishermen.”
Ano said in a statement that the Philippines “will take all appropriate actions to cause the removal of the barriers and to protect the rights of our fishermen in the area.” He did not elaborate.
It’s the latest flare-up in long-simmering territorial disputes in the busy and resource-rich waterway, most of which is claimed by China. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan are involved with China in the conflicts, which have long been regarded as a potential Asian flashpoint and a delicate fault line in the U.S.-China rivalry in the region.
Washington lays no claim to the sea passageway, a major global trade route, but U.S. Navy ships and fighter jets have carried out patrols for decades to challenge China’s expansive claims and promote freedom of navigation and overflight. China has told the U.S. to stop meddling in what it says is a purely Asian dispute.
The Chinese barrier denies Filipinos access to the rich fishing lagoon surrounded by underwater coral outcrops, Philippine coast guard spokesperson Commodore Jay Tarriela said.
He said China’s coast guard installs the removable barrier when Philippine fishing boats show up in large numbers near the shoal.
“It’s an illegal and illegitimate action coming from the People’s Republic of China,” Tarriela told reporters. “Definitely it affects our food security.”
A Philippine Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources ship which anchored off Scarborough on Friday and at least 54 Filipino fishing boats were ordered by four Chinese coast guard ships by radio to leave the territory, saying the Filipinos were breaching Chinese and international law. The Philippine fisheries ship insisted in its radio response that it was on a routine patrol in Philippine waters, Tarriela said.
The Philippines says Scarborough Shoal lies within its exclusive economic zone, a 200-nautical mile (370-kilometer) stretch of water where coastal states have exclusive rights to fish and other resources.
Those rights were upheld by a 2016 arbitration decision set up under the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, Ano said.
China refused to participate in the arbitration sought by the Philippines in 2013, a year after a tense standoff between Chinese and Philippine ships at Scarborough. Beijing refused to recognize the 2016 arbitration ruling and continues to defy it.
The 2012 standoff ended with Chinese ships seizing and surrounding the atoll.
Chinese coast guard ships have also blocked Philippine government vessels delivering supplies and personnel to Philippine-occupied Second Thomas Shoal, resulting in near-collisions that the Philippine government has condemned and protested.
Washington has said it’s obligated to defend the Philippines, its oldest treaty ally in Asia, if Filipino forces, ships and aircraft come under attack, including in the South China Sea.
veryGood! (763)
Related
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- The Nobel Peace Prize is to be announced in Oslo. The laureate is picked from more than 350 nominees
- A judge rules against a Republican challenge of a congressional redistricting map in New Mexico
- Georgia Power will pay $413 million to settle lawsuit over nuclear reactor cost overruns
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Donald Trump’s lawyers seek to halt civil fraud trial and block ruling disrupting real estate empire
- Ranking MLB's eight remaining playoff teams: Who's got the best World Series shot?
- Indonesia denies its fires are causing blankets of haze in neighboring Malaysia
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- UK’s opposition Labour Party gets a boost from a special election victory in Scotland
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Police bodycam video shows arrest of suspect in 1996 killing of Tupac Shakur
- Harvesting water from fog and air in Kenya with jerrycans and newfangled machines
- U.N rights commission accuses South Sudan of violations ahead of elections
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Biden's Title IX promise to survivors is overdue. We can't wait on Washington's chaos to end.
- Biden says a meeting with Xi on sidelines of November APEC summit in San Francisco is a possibility
- German prosecutors say witness evidence so far doesn’t suggest a far-right leader was assaulted
Recommendation
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
Slain journalist allegedly shot by 19-year-old he was trying to help: Police
Pakistan says its planned deportation of 1.7 million Afghan migrants will be ‘phased and orderly’
Pennsylvania’s Democratic governor, a rising political star, crosses partisan school choice divide
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Flood unleashed by India glacial lake burst leaves at least 10 people dead and 102 missing
3 bears are captured after sneaking into a tatami factory as northern Japan faces a growing problem
73-year-old woman attacked by bear near US-Canada border, officials say; park site closed