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AFP chief: China fired water cannon at Pinoy fishermen in Panatag Shoal


Armed Forces chief General Emmanuel Bautista on Monday accused China's coast guard of firing water cannon at Filipino fishermen for the first time to drive them away from a disputed sea shoal.
 
At a forum of the Foreign Correspondents Association of the Philippines (FOCAP), Bautista said Chinese vessels fired cannon on January 27 near Panatag (Scarborough) Shoal – the subject of a bitter territorial row in the strategically important South China Sea.

The Philippines refers to parts of the South China Sea as West Philippine Sea.
 
"The Chinese coast guard tried to drive away Filipino fishing vessels to the extent of using water cannon," Bautista said.
 
He did not say if anyone was hurt and added that China continues to maintain an armed coast guard and other vessels at the shoal.
 
Chinese embassy spokesmen could not be contacted for comment.
 
Panatag (Scarborough) Shoal lies 220 kilometers (135 miles) off Zambales. It is about 650 kilometers from Hainan island, the nearest major Chinese land mass. The Philippines also refer to Panatag Shoal as Bajo de Masinloc.
 
In April 2012, the Philippines and China had a tense standoff which ended with the former retreating from the shoal – a rich fishing area.
 
China has occupied the shoal as part of its claim to most of the South China Sea including waters near the coasts of its neighbors.
 
The Philippines, along with Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam also have competing claims to parts of the sea, and the rivalries have been a source of tension for decades.
 
The South China Sea is one of the world's most important waterways as it is home to vital shipping lanes and is believed to sit atop lucrative deposits of natural resources.
 
Last year, Manila asked a United Nations arbitration tribunal to rule on the validity of China's claim to most of the sea, but Beijing has refused to be part of the process.
 
"We continue to give primacy to its (the dispute's) peaceful resolution principally through international arbitration," Bautista said.
 
"All our actions are in support to that. We remain hopeful that the issue can be resolved peacefully and result in peace and stability in the region."
 
He added too that "our resolve to perform our mandate as protectors of the people and the state and of our national territory" had not been weakened.
 
"We will continue to perform that mandate with whatever we've got," he said, adding that the country was in the first phase of modernising its poorly-equipped armed forces. — Agence France-Presse