China On 13 June 2019, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman pronounced the incident an "ordinary maritime accident." The following day, the Chinese Embassy in Manila released a statement via
Facebook claiming that a Chinese fishing boat,
Yuemaobinyu 42212, "was berthed near Reed Bank when it was suddenly besieged by 7 or 8 Filipino fishing boats". In attempting to evade the Filipino boats, the Chinese vessel's lightning grid cable dragged into the Filipino boat's pilothouse, causing the boat to tilt and founder. However, this Facebook post was later deleted. China released a revised statement on 18 June 2019, omitting the narrative that
Yuemaobinyu 42212 had been besieged by 7 or 8 Filipino fishing boats. The statement referred to the incident as an "accidental collision" between fishing boats. It offered sympathies to the Filipino fishermen. In August 2019, Chen Shiqin, the President of the Guangdong Fishery Mutual Insurance Association, sent a letter to the Philippines apologizing for one of its member's ships sinking
F/B Gem-Ver and subsequently abandoning its crew. It was initially reported that the apology was accepted, but this was later refuted by the
Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs.
Philippines Defense Secretary
Delfin Lorenzana on 12 June 2019 (
Philippine Independence Day) condemned the sinking of
F/B Gem-Ver. In particular, he denounced "the actions of the Chinese fishing vessel for immediately leaving the incident scene abandoning the 22 Filipino crewmen to the mercy of the elements", an action which he described as "cowardly." Foreign Affairs Secretary
Teodoro Locsin Jr. lodged a
diplomatic protest regarding the incident with the People's Republic of China on the same day.
Philippine Navy chief Vice Admiral
Robert Empedrad on 15 June stated that what happened to the Filipino fishing boat was "not an accident but a deliberate maneuver to ram the smaller vessel."
Philippine Supreme Court Justice
Antonio Carpio also stated that it was "highly likely that a
Chinese maritime militia vessel rammed the Filipino fishing vessel." The
People's Liberation Army 's maritime militia, estimated to field 300 vessels and 4000 personnel, is made up of civilian fishermen who receive military training and pay. Their boats are equipped with reinforced hulls for ramming other vessels, high-powered water hoses, and sophisticated communications gear. After days of silence, President
Rodrigo Duterte made a statement on 17 June 2019 about the incident, stating that this was a "maritime incident." For his part,
F/B Gem-Ver captain Jonel Insigne declined to meet with the Philippine President; Insigne was described as "still too traumatized" by the incident to travel to the nation's capital. Duterte later stated that he was allowing China to continue fishing in the Philippines'
exclusive economic zone. This drew a disappointed reaction from the fishermen concerned, so much so that even the wife of the
Gem-Ver's captain stated that she would welcome
Duterte's impeachment. After the Chinese sent a letter of apology for the incident to the Philippines in August 2019, Philippine Justice
Antonio Carpio emphasized that the author was in error when he stated that the incident occurred in the "waters of Reed Bank, Nansha Island Group." Nansha is the Chinese name for the
Spratly Islands. Reed Bank is an entirely separate feature from any island in the Spratlys.
United States The
United States Embassy in Manila stated on 14 June 2019, urging "all parties to refrain from using coercion and intimidation to assert their territorial and maritime claims."
Vietnam Vietnam released a statement on 20 June 2019, saying that its fishermen complied with international maritime laws when they rescued the distressed crew of the Filipino fishing boat.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Le Thi Thu Hang cited the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) and the convention of the
International Maritime Organization (IMO) and that Vietnam's vessels were discharging international obligations while operating at sea. ==See also==