
No Chinese patrols during PH-Japan maritime activity —PH Navy
The Philippine Navy on Tuesday said that the recent Bilateral Maritime Cooperative Activity (BMCA) between Philippines and Japan had been lawfully conducted with no alleged Chinese coordinated air and sea patrols.
That's according to Philippine Navy Spokesperson for the West Philippine Sea Rear Admiral Roy Vincent Trinidad, as he denied a report from South China Morning that Beijing conducted patrols during the two countries' BMCA.
'What was monitored by the Philippine Navy is the continued illegal presence of the [People's Liberation Army Navy (PLA-N)] and [Chinese Coast Guard (CCG)] in our maritime zones, specifically in Bajo de Masinloc, Sabina Shoal, Pag-asa Island, and Ayungin Shoal," Trinidad said in a statement.
Based on a monitoring report by the Philippine Navy, there were at least 12 Chinese vessels observed within the disputed waters from June 14 to 15, 2025.
"This report is another attempt on misinformation, disinformation and malinformation to shape the domestic and international narrative favorable to the illegal claims in our maritime zones of the Communist Party of China," Trinidad added.
The Navy reported that despite Chinese presence, the BMCA was successful and was conducted professionally and safely within the Philippines' Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).
'This maritime activity was more than a demonstration of maritime capability; it was a clear expression of our enduring commitment to peace, regional stability, and a rules-based international order in the Indo-Pacific,' Trinidad added. —Jiselle Anne Casucian/ VAL, GMA Integrated News
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

GMA Network
2 days ago
- GMA Network
China's military vows to boost combat readiness after Taiwan president's speeches
A Chinese navy vessel is seen on a giant screen showing news footage about joint army, navy, air and rocket forces drills around Taiwan by the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA), outside a shopping mall in Beijing, China, April 1, 2025. REUTERS/ Florence Lo/ File photo BEIJING — The People's Liberation Army "shows zero tolerance to Taiwan independence separatist activities," a Chinese defense ministry spokesperson said on Thursday when asked about recent speeches made by Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te. The PLA will enhance combat readiness to firmly safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity, spokesperson Zhang Xiaogang told a regular press conference. "The Lai authorities keep pushing Taiwan into a dangerous situation of war; they are the cause of harming the livelihood of the Taiwanese people," Zhang said, adding that Lai's comments showed his "ill intentions." Lai on Sunday began a series of 10 speeches on "uniting the country," saying that democratically-ruled Taiwan was "of course a country" and that China had no legal or historical right to claim it. Beijing and Taipei have clashed over their competing interpretations of history in an escalating war of words over what Beijing views as provocations from Taiwan's government, saying it was impossible to "invade" what was already Chinese land. Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring the island under its control and has a particular dislike for Lai, describing him as a "separatist." Taiwan strongly objects to China's sovereignty claims and says it is up to the island's people to decide their future. Tensions between China and Taiwan, including several rounds of Chinese war games, have grown over the last five years and now include daily air and naval deployments near the island. The last Chinese war games in April and October were widely seen by regional military attaches as a test of a possible blockade of Taiwan. The U.S. and its regional allies are watching closely, with some officials saying that China's deployments and its military modernization have raised the possibility Beijing may one day make good on its threats to take Taiwan by force. — Reuters


GMA Network
2 days ago
- GMA Network
Enrique Manalo to leave top DFA post on June 30
After serving as the country's top diplomat under President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., Secretary Enrique Manalo will leave his post at the Department of Foreign Affairs, an agency confronting multiple international crises, on June 30. Manalo, 72, bid farewell to at least three dozen members of the Philippine and international media at a luncheon Thursday and described his term as three meaningful years of "building peace and cooperation and fostering enduring friendships" with allies "and even China." "Our foreign policy remains the same. We're firmly anchored on the values and principles of peace, democracy, human rights, fairness, and justice. And we will continue to do so, especially in terms of enhancing national security," Manalo said. Manalo said he actively advocated for economic security, as well as the promotion of the rights and well-being of Filipinos abroad. A seasoned career diplomat, Manalo was appointed by Marcos as DFA chief on July 1, 2022, replacing Teodoro Locsin Jr. He became acting Foreign Secretary from March 9 to May 17, 2017, after Perfecto Yasay failed to get the confirmation of the bicameral Commission on Appointments as DFA Secretary. Manalo, who retired from the Foreign Service in 2018, served as Philippine Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York under former President Rodrigo Duterte from 2020 to June 30, 2022. It is expected that he will be reappointed to this role following his departure from the top DFA job. Marcos accepted Manalo's courtesy resignation on June 23, as announced by Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin in a televised news conference. Marcos announced in June a major Cabinet revamp after his senatorial candidates won fewer seats than the administration hoped for in the May 12 midterm elections. He asked all Cabinet members to submit their letters of resignation and had accepted several, including Manalo's. Bersamin announced that Manalo would be replaced by DFA Undersecretary for Bilateral Relations and ASEAN Ma. Theresa Lazaro, whose remarkable career in the foreign service largely focused on crafting Philippine foreign policy. Lawmakers confirmed her appointment as the next DFA chief on June 11. A former ambassador to France and Australia, Lazaro also led negotiations and talks in the Association of Southeast Nations, including a proposed code of conduct agreement in the disputed South China Sea between the 10-member bloc and China. In July, the DFA announced that China and the Philippines had forged a landmark provisional arrangement that ended increasingly violent confrontations in the Philippine-occupied Second Thomas Shoal, the international name for Ayungin Shoal. Lazaro, 66, led the negotiations with Chinese officials for that temporary agreement, which has allowed at least eight resupply and rotation of troop missions for Filipino forces aboard the BRP Sierra Madre ship without any violent clashes. The international community feared that the worsening incidents could spark a major armed confrontation that could involve the United States, a defense treaty ally of the Philippines. Lazaro also led talks between the Philippines and China about several confrontations in the West Philippine Sea, called the Bilateral Consultation Mechanism, or BCM. In those meetings hosted alternately by the Philippines and China, Lazaro's delegation from different government agencies formally protested China's assertive actions in the resource-rich waters and underscored Marcos' policy of "not giving a single square inch" of Philippine territory and interests. — VBL, GMA Integrated News

GMA Network
3 days ago
- GMA Network
China, Taiwan clash over history, Beijing says can't 'invade' what is already Chinese territory
A giant screen shows news footage of military drills conducted in the Taiwan Strait and areas to the north, south and east of Taiwan, by the Eastern Theater Command of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA), in Beijing, China October 14, 2024. REUTERS/ Tingshu Wang/File photo BEIJING/TAIPEI - China and Taiwan clashed over their competing interpretations of history in an escalating war of words over what Beijing views as provocations from Taiwan's government, and said it is impossible to "invade" what is already Chinese land. China views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory and has stepped up military and political pressure over the past five years. China has an especial dislike of Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te, calling him a "separatist". Lai has since Sunday given two speeches in what will be a series of 10 on "uniting the country", saying that Taiwan is "of course a country" and China has no legal or historical right to claim it. Speaking on Wednesday at a regular news briefing in Beijing, Taiwan Affairs Office spokesperson Zhu Fenglian said any "independence provocations" from Lai and his administration will face "resolute countermeasures". "Though the two sides of the Taiwan Strait have not yet been fully reunified, the historical and legal fact that compatriots on both sides belong to one China and that both sides' compatriots are Chinese has never changed," she said. Tensions between China and Taiwan, including several rounds of Chinese war games, have raised the possibility Beijing may one day make good on threats to take Taiwan by force which could ignite a regional war. China's last war games were in April, and its air force and navy operate around Taiwan on a daily basis, sometimes using dozens of warplanes, according to the island's defense ministry. Asked about US comments on Chinese drills strengthening preparations for an attack, Zhu corrected the reporter. "Taiwan is a part of China; there is no invasion to speak of," she said. Lai takes a different view on Taiwan's status and future. In a speech late on Tuesday, he said Taiwan's future can only be decided by its people, democratically, not by a decision by any party or president, and that "Taiwan independence" refers to the island not being a part of the People's Republic of China. The defeated Republic of China, founded after the 1911 revolution that brought down the last emperor, fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war to Mao Zedong's communists, and that remains the island's formal name. "How old is the Republic of China? It's 113 years old, and will be 114 years old this year. The People's Republic of China? It's only some 70 years old, right? It's simple and clear," Lai said. This year's 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two is another sensitive topic, and China has invited old soldiers who fought for the Republic of China to a military parade in Beijing in early September. Taiwan does not want them to attend, and on Wednesday its defense minister, Wellington Koo, said Beijing was trying to distort history. "The war of resistance was led and won by the Republic of China, not the People's Republic of China — this is without a doubt," he told reporters at parliament. —Reuters