Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Philippines denies 'irresponsible' Chinese report on disputed reef
ADVERTISEMENT


Manila, April 28 (AFP) Apr 28, 2025
The Philippines on Monday slammed an "irresponsible" Chinese state media report claiming a disputed reef in the South China Sea was under Beijing's control, saying the status quo was unchanged.

The Sandy Cay reef lies near Thitu Island, or Pag-asa, where the Philippines stations troops and maintains a coast guard monitoring base.

Chinese state broadcaster CCTV said Saturday that the country's coast guard had "implemented maritime control" over Tiexian Reef, part of Sandy Cay, in mid-April.

The Philippines and China have been engaged in months of confrontations over the South China Sea, which Beijing claims nearly in its entirety despite an international ruling that its assertion has no legal basis.

"There is no truth whatsoever to the claim of the China Coast Guard that the (Sandy Cay sandbanks) have been seized," National Security Council spokesman Jonathan Malaya told a Monday press conference.

"It's in the interest of the People's Republic of China to use the information space to intimidate and harass," he said, calling the Sandy Cay report a "made-up" story that had been "irresponsible" to disseminate.

CCTV on Saturday published a photograph of four coast guard officials posing with a national flag on the reef's white surface, in what the broadcaster described as a "vow of sovereignty".

There do not appear to be any signs that China has permanently occupied or built a structure on the reef, which is a group of small sandbanks in the Spratly Islands.

Both the Philippine and Chinese coast guards have issued statements in the past 24 hours describing successful missions in which they landed on the reef to exercise their claims of sovereignty.

In recent months, Beijing and Manila have blamed each other for causing what they describe as the ecological degradation of several disputed landforms in the South China Sea.

The US and Philippine militaries are currently conducting joint exercises that Beijing has said constitute a threat to regional stability.

Chinese warships have been spotted in Philippine waters since those bilateral "Balikatan" exercises kicked off last week, with aircraft carrier Shandong reportedly coming within 2.23 nautical miles (about four kilometres) of northern Babuyan Island.


ADVERTISEMENT





Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Amazon launches first Starlink-rival internet satellites
The Starlink Takeover: Are Traditional Satellite Phones Obsolete?
How Space Exploration Opens Up New Horizons for Global Security and Governance

24/7 Energy News Coverage
UN chief says energy revolution unstoppable despite US pivot
ACES mission delivers record-breaking atomic clock to ISS for precision timekeeping
Cambodia approves cement factory in wildlife sanctuary

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
New Zealand cracks down on foreign actors surveilling space activity
Confidence in NATO security guarantees plunges in Finland: survey
US lost 7 multi-million-dollar drones in Yemen area since March

24/7 News Coverage
The eukaryotic leap as a shift in life's genetic algorithm
China deploys army of fake NGOs at UN to intimidate critics: media probe
Carney's Liberals win Canada election defined by Trump



All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.