Categories: World

Philippines accuses China of firing water cannon at boats in South China Sea

The Philippine Coast Guard has accused its Chinese counterpart of firing water cannon at its vessels and blocking them in the disputed South China Sea.

It said this happened when its ship was escorting boats carrying supplies for Filipino soldiers stationed on one of the contested Spratly Islands.

The US condemned Beijing's "dangerous actions", also blaming Chinese "maritime militia" for the incident.

China has not publicly commented on the reported incident.

Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea, including the Spratlys, which is also claimed in part by the Philippines.

There are also competing claims by Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei and Taiwan.

  • Cat-and-mouse chase with China in hotly contested sea
  • What is the South China Sea dispute?

In a statement, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) said the incident happened on Saturday as its vessels were heading to Second Thomas Shoal in the Spratly Islands.

It described China's actions as "excessive and unlawful", adding that they also violated international law.

Meanwhile, the US Department of State voiced its support for "our Philippine allies".

"Firing water cannons and employing unsafe blocking manoeuvres, PRC [China's] ships interfered with the Philippines' lawful exercise of high seas freedom of navigation and jeopardised the safety of the Philippine vessels and crew," the department said in a statement.

China ignores an international arbitration court's ruling that its claim to almost the entire South China Sea is ill-founded.

In April, a BBC team aboard a PCG ship witnessed Chinese harassment at first hand.

The South China Sea is now one of the world's biggest flashpoints, especially as US-China tensions have soared in recent years.

Access to these waters is key to defending Taiwan at a time when China's claims over the self-governed island have intensified.

The waterways also host $5tn (£4tn) of global trade every year, raising concerns that Beijing's increasing footprint could restrict commerce.

Share

Recent Posts

Under Armour data breach claims trigger alerts for millions of users

Sportswear and fitness brand Under Armour is investigating claims of a massive data breach after…

15 hours ago

Fox News AI Newsletter: Amazon cuts thousands of roles

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER: - Amazon to cut 16,000 roles as it looks to invest in…

17 hours ago

YouTube lets parents limit or block Shorts for teens

YouTube is rolling out new parental controls designed to give families more say over how…

20 hours ago

Humanoid robot makes architectural history by designing a building

What happens when artificial intelligence (AI) moves from painting portraits to designing homes? That question…

2 days ago

Thousands of iPhone apps expose data inside Apple App Store

Apple often promotes the App Store as a secure place to download apps. The company…

2 days ago

Tiny autonomous robots can now swim on their own

For decades, microscopic robots lived mostly in our imagination. Movies like Fantastic Voyage convinced us…

3 days ago