Tug line severed: China's coast guard blocks Philippine naval ship

Shortly before the visit of US Vice President Kamala Harris, the Philippines reported an incident with China in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea.

Tug line severed: China's coast guard blocks Philippine naval ship

Shortly before the visit of US Vice President Kamala Harris, the Philippines reported an incident with China in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. That could fuel the dispute over the strategically important archipelago again.

Incident in the disputed South China Sea: According to the Philippine military, the Chinese coast guard has blocked a naval ship in the country. The team was recovering unidentified metal debris near an island claimed by the Philippines on Sunday when the Chinese Coast Guard intervened and took the metal object, said Vice Admiral Alberto Carlos, a regional military commander. To do this, the Chinese cut the tow line attached to the Philippine ship. No one was injured, it said.

The incident happened about 700 meters off the coast of Pag-asa Island, part of the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. Pag-asa is the largest of the Philippines-administered islands in the group.

Just a few hours later, US Vice President Kamala Harris landed in the Philippines on Sunday evening. On Tuesday she wants to visit Puerto Princesa in the western island province of Palawan, which includes the island of Pag-asa. Observers believe the visit could fuel tensions with China.

Relations between the two world powers are at a low point. China's head of state and party leader Xi Jinping met with US President Joe Biden at the G20 summit in Bali last week. Xi and Harris met briefly at the APEC summit in Thailand over the weekend.

China claims all of the strategically important Spratly Islands, while Brunei, Malaysia and the Philippines each claim part of the islands. There are military garrisons on many of the otherwise uninhabited islands.