The Philippines expressed alarm Thursday over what
it said were escalating Chinese efforts to drive off Filipino aircraft from a
disputed South China Sea island garrisoned by Manila, in dangerous confrontations.
Rear Admiral
Alexander Lopez said seven Filipino patrol planes on separate flights between
Thitu island and Chinese-held Subi Reef in the Spratly Islands
had been warned to stay away in radio messages from Chinese forces on Subi.
"Recently
this area has been the source of air challenges to our aircraft landing and
departing from Pagasa island," he told a hearing of the senate national
defense committee, using the Filipino name for the Philippine-garrisoned Thitu.
The Philippine
military last week reported an incident involving a Fokker plane which was
challenged by a Chinese vessel on April 19. But Lopez, commander of Filipino
forces in the South China Sea, said there had
been six other warnings issued since then.
All seven
Filipino aircraft were addressed as "foreigner planes", advised they
were entering a Chinese "military area", and told to leave to avoid
to avoid a possible "misjudgement," Lopez told reporters after the
hearing.
"We are
navigating in international airspace and conducting normal patrols," he
quoted the Filipino pilots as replying. They did not alter their course.
"Fear will
bring you no good ... The risk is always there, but that's what we're being
paid for," Lopez said.
China claims most of the resource-rich South China Sea, even reefs, shoals and cays close to the
shores of its neighbors. The claims overlap those of Brunei,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam
and Taiwan.
The Spratlys are
considered a potential Asian flashpoint, and claimant nations have expressed
alarm as China
has embarked on massive reclamation activity. Lopez said surveillance showed Beijing was enlarging
seven features of the Spratly group that it occupies, including Subi.
Satellite photos
last month showed a runway and harbor taking shape in one location which was
little more than a reef when works began late last year.
The admiral said
the reclamation would potentially give China air and naval bases in the
disputed region and house "thousands" of personnel.
"These
developments are disturbing to say the least, and alarming to say the
most," Philippine Defence Secretary Voltaire Gazmin told the Senate
hearing.
Asked if the Philippines feared China would eventually try to seize
Thitu, Gazmin told AFP: "We have a problem but we haven't given up our
claim to Pagasa. That remains ours."
"I don't
think China
is ready to go to war over small islands," he added.
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