Rescue stranded Filipino fishermen in South China Sea Maritime Tickers

Rescue stranded Filipino fishermen in South China Sea

After their vessel suffered an engine explosiont the China Coast Guard actively obstructed a rescue operation to save two Philippine fishermen, according to Philippine Coast Guard spokesman Jay Tarriela.

The Philippine Coast Guard said one of its ships encountered “shadowing and initial blocking” by Chinese vessels while en route to rescue the crew of a stricken Filipino fishing boat. The Chinese ships ceased these actions and offered to help after being informed about the “humanitarian mission”, it added.

,The Philippine Coast Guard vessel BRP Sindangan responded to a request for assistance from a fishing boat at Scarborough Shoal, a contested reef controlled by Chinese forces within the Philippine exclusive economic zone. According to Tarriela, the CCG deployed two rigid hull inflatable boats (RHIBs) and attempted to “obstruct and hinder” the efforts of the rescuers. In a video from the scene, two large China Coast Guard cutters can be seen approaching the stricken fishing boat while the PCG cutter holds station alongside.

The Philippine Coast Guard boat crew managed to evade the CCG patrol boats and transfer two injured fishermen on board for first aid. The two victims had second degree burns, and the BRP Sindangan got under way for Luzon – with the fishing boat in tow – to deliver them safely to higher medical care. The cutter arrived in Subic Bay in the early hours of Monday morning and transferred the two fishermen to an ambulance service.

Via state media, the China Coast Guard released its own video of the encounter and claimed that it had helped rescue the injured fishermen. The video showed China Coast Guard personnel throwing life preservers onto the stricken vessel.

The Philippine Coast Guard routinely encounters obstruction from the China Coast Guard at Scarborough Shoal and at Second Thomas Shoal, the two major flashpoints in the Spratly Islands. Several recent incidents have turned violent, and multiple Philippine servicemembers have been injured by ramming and water-cannoning. In the last run-in at Second Thomas Shoal, one Philippine soldier lost his thumb when a China Coast Guard launch rammed his boat.

Video footage released by the Philippine military showed Chinese coast guard sailors brandishing knives, an axe, and other weapons on Jun 17 in a clash with Philippine naval vessels near the disputed Second Thomas Shoal.

A Filipino sailor lost a thumb in the clash, which broke out when Philippine forces were attempting to resupply marines stationed on a derelict warship that was deliberately grounded atop the shoal in 1999 to assert Manila’s territorial claims, AFP reported.

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