Newly installed Foreign Affairs Secretary Jose Almendras on
Monday vowed to take appropriate diplomatic action against China once Philippine defense authorities have
verified the reported harassment of Filipino fishermen by Chinese Coast Guard
vessels off the Manila-claimed Scarborough shoal in the West
Philippine Sea .
“When and if our Armed Forces does validate it, then we will
be launching our official course of action -– to express our opinions according
to the diplomatic channels,” Almendras said in his first press conference since
assuming as DFA chief on March 8 when his predecessor, Albert del Rosario
stepped down due to health concerns.
Almendras met with China ’s
top envoy to Manila ,
Zhang Jianhua, to discuss bilateral concerns, but admitted that the issue was
not taken up because the incident has yet to be verified.
The new DFA Secretary described his meeting with Zhang as
“very nice and friendly” but said incident on the shoal, located 124 nautical
miles off the nearest Philippine landmass of Palawan and 472 nautical miles
from China’s nearest coastal province of Hainan, was “not discussed at all.”
Almendras said Zhang was the one who sought the meeting.
“It was not mentioned. We can not raise it until we have the
information,” Almendras later on told reporters after his meeting with the
Chinese diplomat that last for about 30 minutes.
In a move that is likely to raise tensions anew between the
two Asian neighbors embroiled in a years-long territorial spats over contested South China Sea territories, Chinese Coast Guard rubber
boats reportedly rammed and destroyed a vessel carrying 11 Filipino fishermen
at the shoal.
The shoal, a U-shaped rocky outcrop rich in marine resources
was seized by China from Manila in 2012 following a two-month standoff, triggering
an arbitration complaint by Manila
that was filed in January 2013. A final decision is expected on or before May
this year.
Reports said fishermen claimed that Chinese vessels drove
them away on March 5 and 6 when they tried get close to the shoal, where access
has since been blocked by Chinese government vessels.
“I’m not saying that our fishermen are lying or not. It’s
just that procedure and protocol requires us to validate and really vet it
before we start doing the immediate action,” Almendras said. “The actions that
we will do is the actions that we have been doing in the past which is to use
the diplomatic channels accordingly.”
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=868867
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