Philippines Accuses China of Plans to Occupy More South China Sea 'Features'

The Philippines defense minister on Sunday accused Beijing of planning to occupy more "features" in the disputed South China Sea, in an escalating war of words over Chinese vessels in the waters.
China claims almost the entirety
of the resource-rich sea and has asserted its stance by building up small
shoals and reefs into military bases with airstrips and port facilities.
Taiwan, Vietnam, the Philippines,
Malaysia and Brunei all have rival claims to the waters, which incorporate
strategically crucial shipping lanes and could harbor oil and gas deposits.
A fleet of more than 200 Chinese
ships that sparked a diplomatic row last month after parking at Whitsun Reef
off the Philippines is now scattered across the contested Spratly Islands.
Manila has called on Beijing to
withdraw the "maritime militia" vessels from the area, saying their
presence is unlawful.
China has refused, insisting they
are fishing boats and are allowed to operate there.
But Defense Secretary Delfin
Lorenzana said the vessels were there for other reasons.
"The continued presence of Chinese maritime
militias in the area reveals their intent to further occupy features in the
West Philippine Sea," he said.
Lorenzana pointed to China's
seizure of the Philippine-claimed Scarborough Shoal and Mischief Reef as
previous examples of them "brazenly violating" his country's
sovereignty.
On Saturday, the outspoken
Lorenzana rejected China's claims that the boats parked at Whitsun Reef -- and
where dozens remained last week -- had been seeking shelter from bad weather.
"I am no fool. The weather has been good so far,
so they have no other reason to stay there," he said.
"Get out of there."
The Chinese embassy in Manila
called Lorenzana's statement "perplexing" and urged authorities to
avoid "unprofessional remarks which may further fan irrational emotions".
Beijing often invokes the
so-called nine-dash line to justify its apparent historic rights over most of the
South China Sea, and it has ignored a 2016 international tribunal decision that
declared this assertion as without basis.