China, Philippines Trade Accusations Over South China Sea

BEIJING, May 3 (Reuters) – China accused ⁠the ⁠Philippines of landing personnel ⁠on a disputed reef in the South ​China Sea on Sunday as Manila said it would dispatch ‌ships to drive off ‌Chinese vessels it said were conducting research illegally.

• ⁠The exchange ⁠extends a run of heightened tension between China and ​the Philippines, a U.S. ally, over Sandy Cay, an unoccupied sandbar in the South China Sea.

• On Sunday, China’s ​Coast Guard said it had identified five Philippine personnel who ⁠had ⁠landed on Sandy Cay, ⁠an ​action Beijing termed “illegal,” according to state-run media outlet Global Times. ​The report did ⁠not specify what – if any – further action China had taken.

• Manila said last week it had dispatched its coast guard to Sandy Cay after state media reports ⁠showed Chinese coast guard personnel arriving on Sandy Cay holding a ⁠Chinese flag.

• Ties between China and the Philippines are strained over territorial disputes in the South China Sea, where Beijing claims sovereignty over almost the entire waterway.

• Also on Sunday, a spokesman for the Philippine Coast Guard said Manila had identified four Chinese vessels conducting what it called illegal research ⁠in its waters and threatened to deploy aircraft and ships to force them to move away.

•  China’s foreign ministry and the Philippine embassy in Beijing did not immediately ​reply to requests for comment.

(Reporting by Kevin ​Krolicki; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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