The Philippines on Monday said it would protest a manoeuvre by two Chinese aircraft in the disputed South China Sea last week which Manila says endangered a routine air patrol over the area.
According to the Philippine military, a Chinese aircraft last Thursday fired flares in the path of a Philippine air force NC-212i plane while it was conducting a patrol over Scarborough Shoal, locally called Bajo De Masinloc.
Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro told reporters the Philippines was preparing to file a protest for the latest manoeuvre, adding: “Naturally we cannot let this be. Even if it is just a diplomatic protest, we cannot not do it because otherwise will acquiesce this.”
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr “strongly condemned” the incident, saying the action of the Chinese aircraft were “unjustified, illegal and reckless.”
“We have barely started to calm the waters, and it is already worrying that there could be instability in our airspace,” he added.
The Chinese military said that the Philippine aircraft had entered the airspace over the reef without authorization “despite repeated warnings.” As a result, naval and air forces were sent to track, warn and finally expel the aircraft from the airspace.
The measures were carried out “professionally and in accordance with the law,” the Chinese military added. The Philippine side should “immediately stop provocations and distortion of facts,” the statement continued. The Chinese troops on the ground remain on alert.
Scarborough Shoal, also known to the Chinese as Huangyan Dao or Democracy Reef, is 230 kilometres from the Philippines’ north-western coast.