The Chinese and Philippine Coast Guards traded blame over the latest collisions involving their vessels in the disputed South China Sea on Saturday.

The Chinese Coast Guard (CCG) said a Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) ship had “deliberately collided” with one of its vessels near the disputed Sabina Shoal, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

“At 12:06, the Philippine ship No. 9701 deliberately collided with the Chinese ship No. 5205, which was normally enforcing rights and law enforcement, in an unprofessional and dangerous manner, resulting in a collision. The responsibility lies entirely with the Philippines,” CCG spokesman Liu Dejun said on Saturday.

A Chinese Coast Guard ship and the Philippine vessel BRP Teresa Magbanua collide near Sabina Shoal in the disputed South China Sea on August 31. (Philippine Coast Guard/AP via CNN Newsource)

PCG spokesperson Jay Tarriela said the Chinese side had “deliberately rammed” a Philippines vessel.

“This afternoon, the Chinese Coast Guard vessel deliberately rammed and collided with the BRP Teresa Magbanua three times, despite no provocation from the Philippine Coast Guard,” he wrote in a post on X.

The duelling accounts come as Chinese and Philippine vessels have engaged in multiple collisions and face-offs over the past week near Sabina Shoal, also known as Xianbin Reef.

The disputed atoll lies just 138km from the Philippines’ west coast and 1198km from China.

A spokesperson for the US State Department said it condemned China for “deliberately colliding three times” with the Philippine vessel.

“On multiple occasions throughout August 2024, (China) has aggressively disrupted lawful Philippine aerial and maritime operations in the South China Sea, including at Sabina Shoal,” said the spokesperson Matthew Miller said.

Miller added that the US called on China to comply with international law and “desist from dangerous and destabilizing conduct.”

China claims almost all of the South China Sea as its sovereign territory despite an international ruling to the contrary.

The escalation in tensions comes just weeks after Beijing and Manila struck a temporary deal to lower tensions that had been rising all summer at another nearby reef, where China’s increasingly aggressive tactics had raised alarm across the region as well as in Washington, a mutual defence ally of the Philippines.

You May Also Like

Warning to long weekend drivers as heavy rain, strong winds lash east coast

Most of Sydney and large parts of NSW will cop a drenching…

Snow hits 23-year low in the Himalayas — now it is threatening 2 billion people

It has stopped snowing in the Himalayas. As a result, the water…

Driver accused of hit-run crash that killed 84-year-old released on bail

The driver allegedly behind a crash that killed an elderly man in…

Journalist who featured on BBC Arabic called for Jews to be ‘burned as Hitler did’ and boasted children slaughtered by ‘hero’ terrorists would ‘go to hell’ – as Beeb faces fresh antisemitism row

A journalist who featured on the BBC’s Arabic channel has called for…