China and the Philippines accused each other on Saturday of deliberately ramming their coast guard ships near a flashpoint shoal in the South China Sea, the latest in a spate of similar incidents in recent weeks.
China claims almost all of the economically vital waterway despite competing claims from other countries and an international court ruling that its assertion has no legal basis.
A Chinese coast guard spokesperson said Saturdayโs incident took place off the disputed Sabina Shoal, which has emerged as a new hotspot in the long-running maritime confrontations between Manila and Beijing.
Sabina Shoal is located 140 kilometres (86 miles) west of the Philippine island of Palawan and about 1,200 kilometres from Hainan island, the nearest major Chinese landmass.
Shortly after noon (0400 GMT), a Philippine ship โdeliberately collided withโ a Chinese vessel near the shoal, known in Chinese as Xianbin, China Coast Guard spokesperson Liu Dejun said, according to state broadcaster CCTV.
โChina exercises indisputable sovereigntyโ in this zone, Liu said, condemning the โunprofessional and dangerousโ conduct of the Philippine vessel.
However, Philippine Coast Guard spokesman Commodore Jay Tarriela said it was the China Coast Guard vessel 5205 that โdirectly and intentionally rammedโ the Philippinesโ 97-metre ship, BRP Teresa Magbanua.
The vessel has been anchored inside Sabina Shoal since April to assert Manilaโs claim over the area.
Tarriela said the ramming happened three times, hitting the BRP Teresa Magbanuaโs port bow, starboard quarter and port beam.
No crew members were injured during the incident but the shipโs bridge wing and freeboard were damaged. A hole was also found.
โIt is important for us to take note that this ramming happened despiteโฆ our unprovoked action and presence in Escoda Shoal,โ Tarriela told reporters, using the Filipino name for Sabina Shoal.
โข โSerious concernโ โ
The collision was the fifth incident of Chinese maritime harassment this month, Tarriela said.
National Maritime Council Spokesperson Alexander Lopez said a report about the latest clash would be sent to the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs for review and appropriate action.
โWe take this with serious concern,โ Lopez told a news conference.
โWe are there on a legal basis because that is ours, we donโt need to ask for permission in our own territory. Let us be very clear about it,โ he said.
Philippine and Chinese vessels have collided near Sabina Shoal at least twice this month and analysts say Beijing is trying to move deeper into Manilaโs exclusive economic zone and normalise Chinese control of the area.
The discovery this year of piles of crushed coral at the shoal ignited suspicion in Manila that Beijing was planning to build another permanent base there, which would be its closest outpost to the Philippine archipelago.
Recent clashes between Philippine and Chinese vessels have also taken place around Second Thomas Shoal in the Spratly Islands.
A Filipino sailor lost a thumb in a clash there in June when Chinese coast guard members wielding knives, sticks and an axe foiled a Philippine Navy attempt to resupply a small garrison.
Sabina Shoal is also the rendezvous point for Philippine resupply missions to the garrison on Second Thomas Shoal.
The repeated confrontations prompted Manila to brand Beijing the โbiggest disruptorโ to peace in Southeast Asia at a defence conference this month.
AFP.
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