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Thursday, May 23, 2013

Indonesian witness said incident happened in Philippine waters; Slain Taiwanese was ‘good to Filipino fishermen’

Taiwanese fisherman Hung Shih-cheng's boat, the Kuang Ta Hsing No. 28, is checked by Taiwanese officers after arriving at Liuqiu port in Pingtung County, southern Taiwan, Saturday, May 11, 2013. Taiwanese boat owner Steven Liao said the damage to the Guang Ta Hsin 28 costs around NT$8 million (P11 million). AP PHOTO

Pinoy working in Pintung county, where the Taiwanese fisherman fatally shot by Philippine coast guards lived, say they feel no threat from local residents.

Antonio Dimacali Manasa, who works at Dongcang Harbor, told the Inquirer that he knew Hung Shih-chen, the fisherman shot dead by Filipino coast guards in waters off Balintang Island on May 9.

"I knew him. He was good to the Filipino fishermen here and he treated us like his children," Manasa said.

Milo Fajardo, another Filipino worker at the harbor, said no Filipino had been attacked or threatened by Taiwanese in the area.

Still, he said, he and other Filipinos there avoid the streets, especially at night.

Hung's boat

Fajardo said he was one of those who helped Taiwanese authorities pull Hung's boat, the Guang Ta Hsin 28, to the dock after the incident.

"After the boat had been docked, they refused to allow people to come near it," he said.

He and other Filipinos sometimes hear unpleasant comments from Taiwanese fishermen.

"But we understand them, and we choose not to react," he said.

Fajardo, who said he had been working in the harbor for 10 years, wondered why the Philippine Coast Guard abandoned the Taiwanese fishing boat after immobilizing it.

"They should have apprehended it," he said. "All they needed to do was tie it to their vessel and tow it."

Had the coast guards done that, he said, the Philippine authorities would have known what the poachers had taken from Philippine waters.

Cautious Coast Guard for Armed Chinese Fishermen

China is using fishermen as their armed paramilitary forces to invade an island. Proven during their invasion to the Mischief Reef in Palawan and the Scarborough Shoal in Zambales Province.

 Last year, South Korean coast guard who apprehended the Chinese fishermen was shot dead.

The distinction between Mainland China's fishermen and Taiwanese Fishermen is hard distinguish because they are using similar Chinese characters which is hard for the Southeast ASEAN countries who are not familiar in it.

Philippine Coast guards also are cautious if the fishermen are armed to apprehend them.

Philippine waters

John Albert Fernando, another Filipino worker at the harbor, said the Indonesian crew member of the Guang Ta Hsin 28 had told him that the boat was in Philippine waters because he had seen "plenty of tuna."

"I talked to him, he took his belongings, and then he disappeared," Fernando said.

According to Fernando, the Indonesian said Hung was in the engine room during the shooting, but looked out and was hit.

A team from the Philippines' National Bureau of Investigation has requested permission from the Taiwanese government to examine the Guang Ta Hsin 28.

The boat is docked at Dongcang, cordoned off and covered with tarpaulin.

Business affected

Taiwanese boat owner Steven Liao said the incident had affected the fishing industry.

"We are cautious," he said, "though it's safe because we have legal papers. Still some of our fishermen have suspended their business."

He said the damage to the Guang Ta Hsin 28 costs around NT$8 million (P11 million).

"It's new and made of fiber glass," he said.

The boat was hit 45 times with high-velocity bullets. Twenty-four of the bullet holes were found at the cabin.

With reports from INQUIRER 

Chinese warship circling Second Thomas Shoal in Palawan; $1.8-billion Philippine military upgrade planned anew

Vintage grounded ship in Kalayaan is Philippines' last Line of defense against China's biggest Naval Fleet presence in its territory read more here

Philippines vows to Defend Territory against China

The Philippines vowed Thursday to "defend what is ours" as part of a stand-off over a Chinese warship circling a South China Sea reef which is occupied by Filipino marines.

The Philippines this week protested the "provocative and illegal presence" of the warship near Second Thomas Shoal, but China brushed off the complaint with an insistence that the area was part of its territory.

Philippine foreign department spokesman Raul Hernandez said Thursday the warship, along with two patrol vessels and a fleet of Chinese fishing boats, remained near the shoal.

"They should not be there. They do not have the right to be there... no-one should doubt the resolve of the Filipino people to defend what is ours in that area," Hernandez said in a text message to AFP.

"Our navy and our coastguard are mandated to enforce the laws of the (Philippine) republic."

China claims nearly all of the South China Sea, even waters far away from its main landmass and approaching the coasts of Southeast Asian countries.

The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also claim parts of the sea, and the area has for decades been regarded as a potential trigger for major military conflict in the region.

Second Thomas Shoal is a tiny group of islets and reefs in the Spratly Islands chain, about 200 kilometers (120 miles) northwest of the Philippine island of Palawan, the nearest major landmass.

All claimants, except Brunei, have troops stationed on various islands and atolls in the Spratlys to assert their claims.

Second Thomas Shoal is guarded by a handful of Philippine marines aboard a World War II-era ship that was deliberately grounded there in the late 1990s to serve as a base.

It is about 41 kilometers (25 miles) east of Mischief Reef, a Philippine-claimed outcrop that China occupied in 1995.

Second Thomas Shoal and Mischief Reef are within the Philippines' internationally recognized exclusive economic zone, and surrounding waters are rich fishing grounds.

Last year China took control of Scarborough Shoal, another bountiful fishing area far closer to Filipino landmass than Chinese, after a similar stand-off ended with the Philippines retreating.

China's announced defense budget of $115 billion this year is nearly 100 times more than the Philippines'.

Philippine President Benigno Aquino this week announced a planned $1.8-billion military upgrade to defend the country's maritime territory against "bullies".

With report from Yahoo news!

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