China conducts military patrol in South China Sea, warns Philippines
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China's military said it had conducted a patrol in the South China Sea on March 28.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BEIJING - China's military said it had conducted a patrol in the South China Sea on March 28, the day US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth reaffirmed Washington's commitment to Manila, which disputes some of Beijing's claims in the waterway.
A spokesman for the Southern Theatre Command of China’s People’s Liberation Army said on March 29 that the Philippines frequently enlisted foreign countries to organise “joint patrols” and “disseminated illegal claims” in the region, destabilising the area.
Mr Hegseth met his counterpart Gilberto Teodoro and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr on March 28 in Manila, the first stop on a tour of Asia that also includes Japan. The same day, the US, Japan and the Philippines held naval drills in the South China Sea.
The Philippine embassy in Beijing did not immediately respond to an e-mailed request for comment.
China claims almost all the South China Sea – through which US$3 trillion (S$4 trillion) in commerce moves a year – overlapping with sovereignty claims by the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam and Brunei. REUTERS

