Courtesy: AFP
ARMED Forces Chief of Staff General Romeo Brawner Jr. contradicted reports that some Filipino soldiers directed their firearms towards China Coast Guard (CCG) personnel during a resupply mission at Ayungin (Second Thomas) Shoal in the West Philippine Sea (WPS) last month.
In a press conference at Camp Aguinaldo in Quezon City on Tuesday, June 4, Brawner said that the troops were simply acting on a “self-defense” since CCG personnel came as close as five to 10 meters from BRP Sierra Madre, a grounded Philippine Navy (PN) vessel which serves as an AFP outpost in the contested shoal, to seize one of the four food packages meant for the troops.
The resupply mission was held on May 19 via airdrop method.
According to Commodore Roy Vincent Trinidad, PN spokesperson for WPS, there were four sorties during the mission, with each sortie supposed to drop food package carrying rice, biscuits, canned goods, and other provisions near the BRP Sierra Madre.
However, during the second sortie, the Chinese Military Commission — which supervises the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy and the CCG — deployed two rigid hull inflatable boats (RHIBs) to forcibly take the second food package at approximately five to 10 meters from the BRP Sierra Madre, Trinidad shared.
It was the first time that the Chinese RHIBs operated that close to BRP Sierra Madre, Trinidad said. At the time, there were also three CCG ships and 12 Chinese maritime militia vessels (CMMVs) in the area while the BRP Sierra Madre fielded two rubber boats to get the supplies, as reported by the Manila Bulletin.
“When the second package was dropped, they went to the area to recover it despite the fact that our boats were already there. Nakipag-agawan pa sila, inunahan pa tayo (They wanted to take it away from us, they wanted to get hold of it first),” Brawner said.
“The thing was when they opened the packages and when they saw that it’s only food stuff, they threw it back into the water. Siguro naghahanap sila ng construction materials (Probably they were trying to find construction materials),” he stated, noting that some of the food items sunk into the sea and were considered as wasted.
Other items that were retrieved — biscuits, rice, coffee and bread — were brought by the AFP troops to the BRP Sierra Madre.
“Wala silang karapatan na kunin ‘yung sarili nating supply because ang laman lang naman ng mga supply natin as you saw were food items and some medicines because sometimes, nagkakasakit ‘yung mga sundalo natin onboard (They have no right to confiscate our supply because it only contains food items and some medicines because sometimes, our troops get sick onboard),” Brawner said.
All the three other food packages were successfully brought to the Filipino troops.
The proximity of the CCG personnel to BRP Sierra Madre raised the alarm of the AFP personnel, prompting them to act according to their rules of engagement (ROE), according to the military chief.
