MANILA, Sep 29 (AFP) - The Philippine Coast Guard vowed on Friday (Sep 29) to "do whatever it takes" to remove any more floating barriers installed by China at a disputed reef in the South China Sea.
The remarks came after an aerial inspection of Scarborough Shoal on Thursday confirmed a 300m barrier that ignited the latest diplomatic row between Beijing and Manila had been taken away.
AFP journalists were on board a Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources plane as it flew over the Chinese-controlled reef and saw access to its shallow waters unblocked.
The floating barrier was found across the entrance to the shoal last week during a routine Philippine government resupply mission to Filipino fishermen.
In a special operation ordered by President Ferdinand Marcos, Philippine Coast Guard personnel cut a rope tethering the barrier to an anchor, allowing it to drift.
"In the next coming months, if ever that barrier will once again be in place, the Philippine Coast Guard will do whatever it takes for us to remove the barrier," coast guard spokesman for the West Philippine Sea Jay Tarriela told reporters, as he sat next to the anchor seized during the mission.
In his first public remarks on the incident, Marcos said on Friday that his government was "not looking for trouble".
But he insisted it would "continue to defend the Philippines, the maritime territory of the Philippines, the rights of our fishermen to ply their trade in the areas where they have been fishing for hundreds of years."
Earlier this week, China warned the Philippines not to "stir up trouble" over the incident that has ignited a war of words between the countries.
China Coast Guard said on Wednesday it had deployed the line of buoys after the Philippine vessel's "intrusion into the lagoon" and removed them on Saturday.
"The on-site operation was professional and standard, legitimate and rational," spokesman Gan Yu said in a statement.
Photo from AFP