Philippines says fishermen injured in China Coast Guard encounter

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This handout photo from the Philippine Coast Guard taken and received on December 13, shows coast guard personnel attending to injured fishermen after an incident with China Coast Guard near Sabina Shoal in the South China Sea. – AFP photo

MANILA (Dec 13): Three Filipino fishermen were injured when China Coast Guard vessels sprayed their boats with water cannons and cut their anchor lines in a disputed area of the South China Sea, Philippine authorities said.

Beijing said Friday it had taken “necessary control measures” involving about 20 Philippine fishing boats near the flashpoint Sabina Shoal, a fish-rich area about 150 kilometres from the island of Palawan.

It was the latest in a series of escalating confrontations between Chinese and Philippine ships in the contested waterway, which Beijing claims nearly in its entirety despite an international ruling that its assertion has no legal basis.

The fishermen were “were targeted with water cannons and dangerous blocking maneuvers”, a Philippine coast guard spokesman said in a statement Saturday.

“Three fishermen sustained physical injuries, including bruises and open wounds. Two (Filipino fishing boats) also suffered significant damage from high-pressure water cannon blasts,” Commodore Jay Tarriela said.

Small Chinese rigid hull inflatable vessels had also “deliberately cut the anchor lines of several (boats)”, he added.

This frame grab from the handout video of the Philippine Coast Guard taken and received on December 13, shows China Coast Guard deploying water cannon towards a Philippine fishing boat near Sabina Shoal in the South China Sea. – AFP photo

In a statement released Saturday, the China Coast Guard said it had taken “necessary control measures against the Philippine vessels … including issuing warnings via loudspeaker and conducting external maneuvering to drive them away”.

Video released by the Philippine side showed water cannon blasts crashing over the small fishing boats. Tarriela told AFP the high-powered streams had “destroyed wooden structures” on the vessels.

The Chinese Embassy in Manila did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

In October, the Philippines accused a Chinese ship of deliberately ramming one of its government vessels in the Spratly Islands, where Beijing has sought to assert its sovereignty claims for years. Beijing blamed Manila for the incident.

A month earlier, one person was injured when a water cannon attack by a China Coast Guard vessel shattered a window on the bridge of another fisheries bureau vessel near the Beijing-controlled Scarborough Shoal. – AFP

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