Not 800, less than 80? That's why you shouldn't take them for serious.
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Phl denies mass deployment of troops in disputed territories
By Alexis Romero Home Updated October 01, 2012 05:19 PM 0 comment to this post
MANILA, Philippines - The military on Monday denied reports stating that 800 Marines have been deployed to the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea) to protect the Philippines’ interests in the area.
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) spokesman Col. Arnulfo Burgos Jr. said only less than 80 Marine soldiers have been sent to the area to administer two Marine battalions.
“There is no truth to the published reports about the recent deployment of 800 Philippine Marines personnel in the area of the Western Command,” Burgos said in a press briefing.
“The only recent deployment in Western Command is the arrival of the 3rd Marine Brigade Headquarters Command Group last Friday composed of less than 80 personnel,” he added.
Burgos said the Marine personnel who arrived recently in Palawan would provide “command and control” to the battalions stationed in the area.
Two battalions namely the Marine Battalion Landing Teams (MBLT) 4 and 12 are currently based in the province.
“No fresh battalions have arrived. The MBLT 4 and 12 have been in the area for years now,” Burgos said.
Lt. Gen. Juancho Sabban, the commander of the Palawan-based AFP Western Command, did not say anything about the deployment of 800 Marines, he added.
When asked what prompted the AFP to move the Marine personnel to Palawan, Burgos said: “These are for operational concerns so we can improve the conduct of operation in the area. We work continuous improvement.”
He added that the move seeks to ensure the “effective management and command of troops in the area.”
A wire report published in several newspapers last week said 800 Marines have been sent to the West Philippine Sea to secure the Philippines’ interest in the hotly-contested area.
The report quoted Sabban as saying that the deployment was meant as a defensive measure and should not be viewed as an aggressive move.
The additional Marine troops, the report said, would conduct patrols near the Spratly Islands, which is being claimed in whole by China and in part by the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan.
Meanwhile, the military kept mum on China’s move to fast-track the infrastructure projects in its newly-established city of Sansha.
“We will let the DFA (Department of Foreign Affairs) answer that. For our part, the performance of our constitutional duty will continue,” Burgos said.
On Sunday, China said it is speeding up the projects in Sansha City despite the protests by the Philippines, which claims that the establishment of the city violates its sovereignty.
China said Sansha authorities started crafting development plans for the city Saturday.
The infrastructure projects in the disputed area include road construction, water supply and drainage on Yongxing Island, the seat of the city government.
China said seven roads with a total length of five kilometers will be repaired or built to improve the island's traffic situation.
A desalinator capable of processing 1,000 cubic meters of seawater a day and an inter-island transportation system are also in the works.
China also announced the start of a housing construction program with a total investment of 18.7 million yuan or $2.97 million.
China formed Sansha on July 24 to strengthen its grip on disputed areas in the West Philippine Sea. The “prefecture level” city was intended to administer three disputed islands in the West Philippine Sea.
China earlier announced that Xisha (Paracels), Zhongsha (Macclesfield bank), and Nansha (Spratlys) islands have been elevated to “prefecture status” under Sansha city from their previous county-level status.
Chinese officials said the establishment of Sansha, which means “city of three sands,” would improve China’s administrative management on the three islands.
The Philippines has protested the creation of the city, saying this would violate its sovereign rights over the waters and continental shelf in the West Philippine Sea.
The DFA said the creation of Sansha infringes into the Philippines’ sovereignty over the Kalayaan Group in Spratlys and the Panatag Shoal, also known by the names Scarborough Shoal and Bajo de Masinloc.
Kalayaan is a fifth class municipality in Palawan and is located on Pag-Asa Island, one of the country’s regime of islands and reefs located in the disputed Spratlys region.
The Philippines has built a town hall, a 1.3-kilometer airstrip, a naval station, a health center and recently a kindergarten school at Pag-asa Island.
On the other hand, the Panatag Shoal is located 124 nautical miles from the nearest base point in Zambales, well within the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone. The Philippines’ ownership of the shoal is backed by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).
The Philippines had filed 10 diplomatic protests against China for violation of the country’s sovereignty under UNCLOS, the latest being China’s establishment of Sansha which covered almost all of West Philippine Sea.
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