China attacks Filipino supply vessel with water cannon — Manila

China Coast Guard refutes the claims and blames the Philippine convoy of forcibly intruding into the area despite repeated warnings.

Philippines accuses China of water cannon attack on supply vessel / Photo: AFP
AFP

Philippines accuses China of water cannon attack on supply vessel / Photo: AFP

The Philippines has said the China Coast Guard blocked a Filipino supply vessel and damaged it with water cannon near a reef off the Southeast Asian country.

The Philippine military said on Saturday that the nearly hour-long attack occurred off Second Thomas Shoal in the contested South China Sea, where Chinese ships have unleashed water cannon and collided with Filipino vessels in similar stand-offs in recent months.

The military released video clips that showed a white ship repeatedly dousing another vessel sailing alongside it with a water cannon. One clip showed two white ships simultaneously firing water at the same vessel.

Another clip showed a white ship marked "China Coast Guard" crossing the bow of a grey vessel it identified as the Philippine supply boat Unaizah May 4, which was damaged in a China Coast Guard water cannon attack in the same area on March 5 that left four crew members injured.

It said the videos were taken Saturday morning while the Unaizah May 4 was on its way to Ayungin Shoal the Filipino name for the outcrop garrisoned by a small unit of Philippine troops that is also claimed by Beijing.

"The UM4 supply boat sustained heavy damages due to the continued blasting of water cannons from the CCG vessels," the military said in a statement, without describing the nature of the damage or whether there were any casualties.

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Despite the attack, the damaged vessel and a coast guard escort ship that came to its aid later delivered its cargo as well as six navy personnel to the Filipino outpost, the military said in an update.

The military also released another video clip which it said was taken after the water cannon attack and showed a Chinese vessel deploying "floating barriers to prevent further entry of any vessels in the shoal".

The Philippine soldiers stationed on the shoal live on a derelict navy ship, the BRP Sierra Madre, and require frequent resupplies for food, water and other necessities as well as transport for personnel rotations.

China Coast Guard spokesman Gan Yu said in a statement that the Philippine convoy "forcibly intruded into the area despite the Chinese side's repeated warnings and route controls", adding the Chinese carried out "control, obstruction and eviction in accordance with law".

"We sternly warn the Philippine side: those who play with fire will bring shame on themselves. The Chinese Coast Guard is ready at all times to resolutely safeguard our country's territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests," Gan added.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea, brushing off rival claims from other countries including the Philippines and an international ruling that its assertion has no legal basis.

The latest confrontation came four days after visiting Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the United States stood by its "iron clad" commitments to defend longtime ally Manila against armed attack in the South China Sea.

Two days after Blinken's visit to Manila, the China Coast Guard also tried to drive away Filipino scientists who landed on two cays near Scarborough Shoal, another contested South China Sea outcrop.

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