South China Sea: new bitter exchange between Manila and Beijing

South China Sea: new bitter exchange between Manila and Beijing
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China and the Philippines exchanged fresh accusations on Thursday after fresh skirmishes in the South China Sea, where the two countries have competing claims.

• Read also: New tensions between Manila and Beijing after an incident in the South China Sea

• Read also: Manila accuses Beijing after new incident in South China Sea

On Saturday, three Filipino soldiers were injured in a skirmish with the Chinese coast guard, who blocked their ship and damaged it with powerful water cannons off one of the disputed reefs, the Second Thomas Atoll.

“We do not seek conflict with any nation, especially nations that claim to be our friends, but we will not allow ourselves to be silenced, subjugated or subjugated,” he said on Thursday. Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos said in a statement.

He promised “over the coming weeks” a series of “proportionate, deliberate and reasonable responses and countermeasures to the open, incessant, illegal, coercive, aggressive and dangerous attacks by Chinese coast guard and Chinese officials. Chinese maritime militia,” he said, adding that “the Filipinos will not give in.”

At almost the same time, China blamed Philippine “provocations” for the current rise in tensions.

“The Philippine side’s provocations are the direct cause of the recent aggravation of the South China Sea dispute,” the ministry said in a statement. “China will not allow the Philippines to do whatever it wants and has responded reasonably and forcefully,” he added.

According to Manila, the ship attacked Saturday was conducting a routine rotation and resupply mission to Second Thomas Atoll, where Philippine soldiers are stationed in a decommissioned boat.

In recent months, Chinese ships have already used water cannons and collided with Philippine ships near the atoll, located about 200 kilometers from the western Philippine island of Palawan and more than 1,000 km away. from Hainan Island, the closest large Chinese territory.

Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea, including waters and islands near the coasts of several neighboring countries, despite an international court ruling in 2016.

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