The Sun (Malaysia)

Manila moves to block China reclamatio­n at shoal

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The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) is committed to sustaining a presence in a disputed area of the South China Sea to ensure China does not carry out reclamatio­n activities at the Sabina Shoal, its spokesman said yesterday.

The coast guard said on Saturday it had deployed a ship to Sabina Shoal, where it accused China of building an artificial island, amid an escalating maritime row, adding two other vessels were in rotational deployment in the area.

Since the ship’s deployment in mid April, the coast guard said it had discovered piles of dead and crushed coral that had been dumped on the sandbars of Sabina Shoal, altering their sizes and elevation.

PCG spokesman Jay Tarriela told a press conference yesterday the coast guard had to make sure it was able to prevent “China from carrying out a successful reclamatio­n in Sabina Shoal”.

He said the coast guard was committed to maintainin­g a presence at the shoal, which Manila calls Escoda.

Located within the Philippine­s’ exclusive economic zone, the shoal is the rendezvous point for vessels carrying out resupply missions to Filipino troops stationed on a grounded warship at the Second Thomas Shoal, where Manila and China have had frequent maritime run-ins.

China has carried out extensive land reclamatio­n on some islands in the South China Sea, building air force and other military facilities, causing concern in Washington and around the region.

Tarriela believed the coast guard had been effective in deterring China from doing small-scale reclamatio­n. It had not documented any activity from the Chinese vessels present in Sabina Shoal since it deployed its multi-role response vessel there in mid-April.

“China does not want to get caught,“Tarriela said.

There was no immediate comment from the Chinese Embassy in Manila.

“China has indisputab­le sovereignt­y over the South China Sea Islands and the adjacent waters,“it said in a statement on Sunday.

China claims almost all of the vital waterway, including parts claimed by the Philippine­s, Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam. The Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n ruled in 2016 that Beijing’s claims had no basis under internatio­nal law, a decision that China rejects. – Reuters

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