Daily Tribune (Philippines)

DFA: Manila protests latest Ayungin Shoal incident

- JOM GARNER

The Philippine­s, through the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), has sent a note verbale to China over the latest incident at Ayungin Shoal where a Filipino sailor lost a thumb.

According to DFA Secretary Enrique Manalo, the Philippine government had sent the note verbale through Chinese Ambassador to Manila Huang Xilian.

Manalo confirmed this to reporters on Wednesday on the sidelines of the East-West Center’s Internatio­nal Media Conference where he was one of the guest speakers.

Last week, at least eight Filipino sailors were injured, including one whose thumb was severed, in a confrontat­ion with the China Coast Guard at Ayungin Shoal.

The Armed Forces of the Philippine­s said the Chinese intercepte­d the resupply boats of the Philippine Navy and came on board wielding bolos, knives and spears.

Manalo had earlier expressed the Philippine government’s intent to bring China back to the negotiatin­g table for talks amid the increasing tensions in the West Philippine Sea.

“We will pursue the peaceful resolution of disputes in accordance with internatio­nal laws, specifical­ly the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and the 2016 arbitral award. And we have been working hard to bring back China to the table to talk with us to resolve our difference­s on these issues,” he told lawmakers during a Senate hearing on Tuesday.

Not a pawn

In his keynote speech at the conference, Manalo denied the Philippine­s was a proxy for another country in a war between two great powers.

“For far too long, the narrative surroundin­g the West Philippine Sea has been obscured by disinforma­tion, coupled with attacks against our government’s IT infrastruc­ture,” he said.

“One such false narrative paints the West Philippine Sea as merely a stage for a great power rivalry in the region, that the Philippine­s is just a pawn in this game, and that we act only at the behest of another country,” he said.

“This reductioni­st view muddles our understand­ing of the complex situation on the ground and detracts from the real crux of the issue — that a country is choosing to ignore internatio­nal law, in particular the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea as affirmed by the 2016 arbitral award, and the legitimate rights and interests of coastal states, such as the Philippine­s,” Manalo said.

He stressed that “only a faithful implementa­tion of the rules in the maritime space can effectivel­y reduce conflicts over maritime boundaries and resource claims, thereby promoting peace and stability at sea.”

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