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South China Sea
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Philippines and Vietnam coastguards hold first joint drills near South China Sea

  • Following the drills off Manila, the Philippines says it will send a ship to Vietnam later this year to boost maritime cooperation

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A Vietnamese coastguard ship fires water cannon during a joint drill between the Philippine and Vietnamese coastguards, in the waters of Bataan province, Philippines. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-PresseandBloomberg

The Philippine and Vietnamese coastguards have held firefighting and search-and-rescue exercises off Manila, the first such drills between the two countries with maritime disputes with Beijing in the South China Sea.

The Philippines and Vietnam claim part of the strategic waterway’s Spratly archipelago but said the drills at the mouth of Manila Bay contributed to maintaining peace and stability in the contested sea.

“It’s a good thing that we are going in one direction, which is the rules-based approach of the Philippines,” Lawrence Roque, captain of the Philippine ship BRP Gabriela Silang, told reporters following the drills on Friday.

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“We hope also that the Vietnam coastguard, particularly the Vietnamese government, will also … follow the Philippines in enhancing or following the rules-based approach,” he added.

The Gabriela Silang and Vietnam’s CSB 8002 vessel fired a water cannon at a second Filipino vessel to simulate the rescue of a boat on fire in choppy waters at the mouth of the bay, which opens into the South China Sea.

A member of the Philippine coastguard personnel salutes as a Vietnamese coastguard ship sails past after their joint maritime exercise off Bataan in the disputed South China Sea on August 9. Photo: AFP
A member of the Philippine coastguard personnel salutes as a Vietnamese coastguard ship sails past after their joint maritime exercise off Bataan in the disputed South China Sea on August 9. Photo: AFP

A Filipino helicopter then dropped orange dummies into the sea as the two vessels launched tiny rubber boats which bobbed violently above the metre- (3.3-foot) tall waves to retrieve the make-believe victims.

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