Preserving the decrepit BRP Sierra Madre and keeping it habitable for a handful of soldiers guarding the Ayungin (Second Thomas) Shoal may be costly, but the stake – the country’s sovereignty – is priceless.
This is
according to the Marines assigned to the remote outpost, which of late had been
a target of harassment by Chinese vessels enforcing Beijing ’s
claim over numerous islets, shoals and sandbars in the West
Philippine Sea .
The
Philippine Navy deliberately grounded the former World War II transport ship in
1999 to serve as garrison for troops tasked to guard or defend the country’s
maritime borders.
The
STAR, which joined resupply and troop rotation operations last March 27 to 31,
learned that a small ship traveling to and from the site of the grounded vessel
consumes on average 83,000 liters of diesel fuel.
Ships
carrying supplies for Sierra Madre usually come from the headquarters of the
Naval Forces West (Navforwest) in Ulugan
Bay in Palawan .
With a
liter of diesel costing P44, every re-supply operation thus costs the
government P3.6 million.
“I have
ample provisions. Even if it will take me one month, I am not returning. I am
bringing in fresh troops and bringing home our colleagues who have been
deployed at BRP Sierra Madre for almost five months,” said LtSg. Ferdinand
Gato, who led last Saturday’s successful delivery of supplies to the Sierra
Madre garrison.
A Bureau
of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) vessel was used in the operations.
“It is my order and I will carry it out,” Gato said.
Two
previous attempts to rotate the troops from Ayungin were blocked by Chinese
coast guard vessels, which have been guarding the shoal since May last year.
“We are
also spending aviation fuel for our air support as well as thousands of liters
of fuel for other ships mobilized as backup each time we conduct our resupply
and troop rotation operations. But it’s worth it. Our freedom, territorial
integrity and sovereignty are priceless,” a Wescom official who asked not to be
named said.
There
are other expenses apart from fuel, officials said.
Soldiers
deployed to areas being claimed by China are entitled to extra
“loneliness pay.”
Outgoing
Ayungin Shoal detachment commander, 1Lt Mike Pelotera, said troops assigned at
Ayungin are receiving extra allowance equivalent to half of their monthly base
pay, or much higher than the P500 combat allowance their land-based colleagues
are entitled to.
While
the extra perks are measly compared to those received by their Vietnamese
counterparts, Pelotera said he and his men don’t mind it at all.
“We are
soldiers and as such it is our duty to follow orders and perform our assigned
mission,” said one of Pelotera’s men.
Pelotera
and his men were each given a bronze cross and a two-week furlough.
A
Vietnamese official, meanwhile, told The STAR in Manila that their soldiers assigned in
disputed areas are hailed as heroes and treated differently from ordinary
soldiers.
Vietnamese
soldiers assigned in the South China Sea
receive higher pay and their families back home are entitled to preferential
treatment by the government.
The
soldiers’ families, according to the official, get free housing and education,
as well as comprehensive medical benefits.
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/regions/04/02/14/ph-navy-ready-pay-price-maintaining-ghost-ship
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