Wary Philippines Says 200 Chinese Vessels at Disputed Reef

The Philippine government expressed concern after spotting more than 200 Chinese fishing vessels it believed were crewed by militias at a reef claimed by both countries in the South China Sea, but it did not immediately lodge a protest.
A
government body overseeing the disputed region said late Saturday that about
220 Chinese vessels were seen moored at Whitsun Reef on March 7. It released
pictures of the vessels lying side by side in one of the most hotly contested
areas of the strategic waterway.
The
reef, which Manila calls Julian Felipe, is a boomerang-shaped and shallow coral
region about 175 nautical miles (324 kilometers) west of Bataraza town in the
western Philippine province of Palawan. It's well within the country’s
exclusive economic zone, over which the Philippines “enjoys the exclusive right
to exploit or conserve any resources,” the agency said in a statement.
The
large numbers of Chinese boats are “a concern due to the possible overfishing
and destruction of the marine environment, as well as risks to safety of
navigation,” it said, although it added that the vessels were not fishing when
sighted.
When
asked if the Philippines would file a protest, Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin
Jr. tweeted, “only if the generals tell me.”
Chinese
Embassy officials did not immediately issue any comment. China, the Philippines
and four other governments have been locked in a tense territorial standoff
over the resource-rich and busy waterway for decades.
Critics have repeatedly called out President Rodrigo Duterte, who has nurtured friendly ties with Beijing since taking office in 2016, for not standing up to China’s aggressive behavior and deciding not to immediately seek Chinese compliance with an international arbitration ruling that invalidated Beijing’s historic claims to virtually the entire sea. China has refused to recognize the 2016 ruling and continues to defy it.
The
arbitration body also ruled that China had breached its duty to respect the
traditional fishing rights of Filipinos when Chinese forces blocked them from
Scarborough Shoal off the northwestern Philippines in 2012. The Philippines,
however, could also not deny Chinese fishermen access to Scarborough, according
to the ruling. The decision did not specify any other traditional fishing areas
within the Philippines’ exclusive zone where fishermen from China and other
countries could be allowed to fish.
“When Xi says ‘I will fish,’ who can
prevent him?” Duterte said two years ago as he defended his nonconfrontational
approach, referring to Chinese President Xi Jinping.
“If I send my marines to drive away
the Chinese fishermen, I guarantee you not one of them will come home alive,”
Duterte said then, adding that diplomatic talks with Beijing allowed the return
of Filipinos to disputed fishing grounds where Chinese forces had previously
shooed them away.
Duterte
has sought infrastructure funds, trade and investments from China, which has
also donated and pledged to deliver more COVID-19 vaccines as the Philippines
faces an alarming spike in coronavirus infections.