WebClick Tracer

FACT CHECK | Columnist echoes China’s claim regarding non-existent pact on grounded PH vessel in West Philippine Sea

20231222 093914 0000

Manila Times columnist Rigoberto D. Tiglao has echoed China’s claim that the Philippines had an agreement with Beijing to remove the BRP Sierra Madre from the Ayungin Shoal in the disputed West Philippine Sea, even if the Chinese government could not produce proof of such an agreement and Manila had denied there is no official record pertaining to it.

This was contained in his column published on Dec. 18. In that article, Tiglao described as fake news the reports by various Philippine media outlets that the presence on Dec. 13 of several Chinese fishing vessels indicated an “invasion,” although he acknowledged those vessels “could be deputized as a naval militia in case they’re needed in some conflict.”

Tiglao was alluding in particular to a report published by manilatimes.net and the inquirer.net that were based on satellite images taken by Planet Labs and supplied to Philippine media by Ray Powell, SeaLight director at the Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation.

He then went on to narrate, based on his own recollection, the circumstances leading to the Chinese occupation of Ayungin Shoal and nearby Mischief Reef.

As for the grounding of Philippine vessels at Ayungin Shoal, Tiglao recounted:

“Arguing that a commissioned ship technically is ‘Philippine soil,’ Estrada’s (referring to then-President Joseph Estrada) military deliberately grounded an LST near Bajo de Masinloc and the BRP Sierra Madre at Ayungin Shoal in 1999.

“The Chinese protested furiously and informed the Estrada government it was an insult as China’s Premier Zhu Rongzi was scheduled to undertake a state visit to the country a month later. Estrada’s foreign secretary Domingo Siazon, who was closer to the president than (then Defense Secretary Orlando) Mercado, was then on a campaign to get the Philippines closer to Beijing, as Estrada had wanted, as he had long believed in the leftist history of the US as an imperialist power.

“Siazon got Estrada to stop Mercado’s operations. The Philippine Navy, however, dilly-dallied and got to remove only the grounded vessel at Bajo de Masinloc. Siazon told the Chinese to put the issue out of media attention and promised to remove the Sierra Madre. To prove this commitment, Siazon agreed that the Philippines would supply the marine contingent on the ship only with food, water and medicine. It would not supply it with construction and other materials that would have prevented it from rusting and sinking into the sea. This explains the very pathetic dilapidated state of the Sierra Madre.” [emphasis supplied]

Tiglao, however, did not cite any official document or any other evidence to prove that Siazon had made such a commitment on behalf of the Philippine government.

Last August 14, Tiglao also wrote that the Philippines did promise to remove BRP Sierra Madre from Ayungin Shoal.

On August 7, China’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement that Manila was “yet to fulfill” its promise to tow away the BRP Sierra Madre from Ayungin Shoal.

“In 1999, the Philippines sent a military vessel and deliberately ran it aground at Ren’ai Jiao, attempting to change the status quo of Ren’ai Jiao illegally. China immediately made serious démarches to the Philippines, demanding the removal of the vessel. The Philippines promised several times to tow it away, but has yet to act. Not only that, the Philippines sought to overhaul and reinforce the military vessel in order to permanently occupy Ren’ai Jiao,” the statement said.

China’s statement came two days after the incident at Ayungin Shoal, where Chinese Coast Guard and militia vessels fired water cannons at Philippine Coast Guard vessels escorting boats delivering supplies to Filipino troops in the West Philippine Sea.

However, Jonathan Malaya, National Security Council Assistant Director General said, “There is no record or any minutes of a meeting or any formal report or any legal document, legally enforceable document or otherwise, or a verbal agreement” to prove that the Philippines made the promise to remove BRP Sierra Madre from Ayungin Shoal.

Malaya added that “we have not [signed] and will never sign or agree to anything that would in effect abandon our sovereign rights and jurisdiction over the West Philippine Sea, in particular Ayungin Shoal precisely because it is located in our exclusive economic zone, it is part of our continental shelf and that fact was affirmed by the 2016 ruling of the Arbitral Tribunal in The Hague.”

He said the Foreign Ministry’s claim is a fiction, noting that “even if we look back at past media reports, you would not see that kind of agreement being discussed.”

“We have no idea what they are talking about. I have talked to our colleagues from the Department of Foreign Affairs, even the ones from the Department of National Defense from the previous administrations. There was no commitment, whatsoever, as far as the Philippines is concerned and there is no record of any such commitment,” Malaya said in an interview over ANC on Tuesday, August 8.

The following day, August 9, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. also belied that there is an agreement between the Philippines and China to remove BRP Sierra Madre from Ayungin Shoal, contrary to the latter’s claims that the Philippine government earlier promised to remove the military vessel.

“I’m not aware of any such arrangement or agreement that the Philippines will remove from its own territory its ship, in this case, the BRP Sierra Madre from the Ayungin Shoal,” Marcos said.

The President made the remarks after the Chinese government renewed its call on August 7 for the Philippine government to remove the BRP Sierra Madre from Ayungin shoal, which has been on the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone since 1999 and has been the country’s symbol of sovereignty rights and jurisdiction.

The chief executive added that he is repealing any commitment should there be an existing agreement between the Philippines and China on the supposed removal of the BRP Sierra Madre from Ayungin Shoal.

“And let me go further, if there does exist such an agreement, I rescind that agreement now,” Marcos said.

Professor Jay Batongbacal, director of the University of the Philippines’ Institute for Maritime Affairs and Law of the Sea, called China’s claim that the Philippines had made a promise to remove the grounded BRP Sierra Madre from Ayungin Shoal a “lie and gaslighting.”

China has insisted that Ayungin Shoal (Ren’ai Jiao to the Chinese) is part of its territory, a claim made on the basis of the “nine-dash line” policy, which was invalidated by the July 12, 2016 decision of the Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration on the maritime case lodged by the Philippines during the administration of the late President Benigno S. Aquino III.

The Philippines currently occupies nine features in the disputed Spratly Islands. These are Rizal Reef, Patag Island, Melchora Aquino Cay or Panata Island, Kota Island, Lawak Island, Parola Island, Ayungin Shoal, Pag-asa Island (the largest and with the only Philippine airstrip in the Spratlys), and Likas Island.

Ayungin Shoal is near Mischief Reef or Panganiban Reef, which the Chinese occupied in 1995 and has since been fortified.

Both Mischief Reef and Ayungin Shoal are within the country’s exclusive economic zone and continental shelf as affirmed by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in 2016.

As with all our other reports, MindaNews welcomes leads or suggestions from the public to potential fact-check stories.

MindaNews is a verified signatory to the Code of Principles of the International Fact-Checking Network.(H. Marcos C. Mordeno / MindaNews)

MindaNews is the news service arm of the Mindanao Institute of Journalism. It is composed of independent, professional journalists who believe and practice people empowerment through media.

23C Saturn St. GSIS Subdivision, Davao City Philippines Tel. No.: 082 297 4360 editor [at] mindanews.com

Search MindaNews

About MindaNews Fact Check

MindaNews Fact Check seeks to fight misinformation and disinformation circulating on the internet, news platforms and communities that we serve. 


What is MindaNews Fact Check?


MindaNews Fact Check tracks and debunks fake news, false claims and misleading statements of government officials, civil society leaders and netizens being spread on the internet, especially on social media sites. MindaNews values truth and accuracy in performing our journalistic work.


Why we fact-check?


Politicians, government officials and other public and private figures at times tend to bend facts to suit or advance their vested interests, or their principals, in effect misleading the public. The distorted facts spread easily with the popularity of the internet and the wide influence of social media.


As independent journalists, our primordial duty is to tell the truth and present facts to help the public discern issues and concerns impacting their lives.


How do we rate claims?


FAKE -  if the claim is completely invented.


FALSE - if the claim contradicts, undermines or disputes truthful facts, actual events and official records (i.e. laws and scientific studies)


MISLEADING – if the claim is based on truth but maliciously twisted that gives a different impression to serve a group or individual’s vested interests.


ALTERED – pertains to images or videos that were manipulated to mislead the public.


MISSING CONTEXT – if the claim needs more clarification or contextualization to make it clearer.

Where do you post your results?


We post our fact-checked stories in mindanews.com, on Facebook and Twitter with links to the original piece. We have a dedicated fact check page, where all fact-checked stories can be found. 


How did MindaNews Fact Check start?


Since its establishment in 2001, MindaNews has been living up to its vision of being the “leading provider of accurate, timely and comprehensive news and information on Mindanao and its peoples, serving economically, politically and culturally empowered communities” and its mission to “professionally and responsibly cover Mindanao events, peoples and issues to inform, educate, inspire and influence communities.”


MindaNews was founded by reporters precisely to ensure that reports about Mindanao, an island grouping that has suffered misinformation and disinformation long before these words became fashionable, are accurate. 


Our policy has always been to ensure that reports are thoroughly vetted before they are dispatched and uploaded on our website. 


Our fact-checking initiative with a uniform format started in October 2021 as part of Internews’ pioneering Philippine Fact-Checker Incubator (PFCI) project. Internews is an international non-profit that supports independent media from 100 countries. 


Prior to the PFCI project, MindaNews co-founded Tsek.ph, a collaboration among Philippine media institutions to fight disinformation and misinformation during the 2019. Tsek.ph did the same thing for the 2022 elections. 


Where do you get funds?


MindaNews has sustained its operation through proceeds from subscriptions of its news service  (news, special reports, opinion pieces, photos) and sales of books. It also receives grants from non-state actors.  Editorial prerogative, however, is left entirely to MindaNews. 


MindaNews does not accept funds from politicians or domestic or foreign states for its fact-checking initiative. For the other operations of MindaNews as a media organization in the past two years, we have received grants from the National Endowment for Democracy and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, which we use for coverage, staff compensation, administrative expenses and to train other journalists.


MindaNews Fact Check is supported by a grant from Internews.


Do you accept leads from the public for your fact-checking initiative?


MindaNews encourages the public to provide us with leads not only for potential fact-check pieces but other news stories as well of interest to the general public.



Our fact checks include this paragraph encouraging readers to be part of the process: “As with all our other reports, MindaNews welcomes leads or suggestions from the public to potential fact check pieces.”


MindaNews Fact Check - Methodology

What standards do you follow when fact-checking?


As a news organization, we strictly adhere to accuracy, fairness, balance, independence, accountability and transparency not just in our fact-checking initiative but in all other aspects of our work at MindaNews.


We abide by the Philippine Press Institute’s Journalist’s Code of Ethics. Since we became part of Internews’ Philippine Fact-Checker Incubator project, we have been striving to adhere with the IFCN Code of Principles, in step with our organization’s commitment to non-partisanship, transparency and fairness.


We fact-check a claim that is specifically claimed to be a fact and involved the public interest or the welfare of the people. We debunk false claims using official government records, journals or interviews with experts. 


We don’t fact-check opinions.

How do we fact-check?

Step 1: Team members monitor press conferences, speeches, statements, news, interviews, social media sites, etc. for statements worth fact-checking.


Step 2: When a claim is worth fact-checking, a team member looks for multiple sources to dispute the claim, including tracing the original source document.


Step 3:  Fact-checked claims are then submitted to the editor for copy editing and vetting. The link/s to debunk the claim are always included in the story.  


Step 4: A rating card is prepared to accompany the fact-checked piece, or infographics if needed, to immediately flag readers what the article is all about. 


Step 5: The senior editor takes another look before the article is posted on the website and social media accounts.

Correction Policy

Consistent with our vision and mission as a media institution, we rectify any error committed. If you spot a factual error, you may notify us thru editor@mindanews.com or our Facebook Messenger @Mindanews.


Correction Workflow


  • Errors pointed out are immediately brought to the attention of the editors and the fact-checking team. 


  • The fact-checker is immediately notified for verification. 


  • Once verified, the error is to be corrected within 24 hours and vetted before publication on the website. 


  • Readers will immediately know errors have been corrected through the Editor’s note posted above the article. 


  • The person who notified MindaNews about the error will be informed that the correction has been made.

About MindaNews

MindaNews is the news service arm of the Mindanao Institute of Journalism (MinJourn). It is composed of independent, professional journalists who believe and practice people empowerment through media. MinJourn, which is duly registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission with registration number CN201700385, is managed by its Board of Directors.

MindaNews values its journalistic independence. It started in May 2001 as a media cooperative and in January 2017 registered as a nonstock, nonprofit media organization.  We do not  accept funding from politicians, political parties or partisan groups.

Editorial staff

Fact-checking Unit: Romer (Bong) Sarmiento, Yas D. Ocampo

 

Mindanao Institute of Journalism

 

Board of Directors

President & CEO: Jowel Canuday, D.Phil. (oxon.)
Vice President: Romer S. Sarmiento

Members
Carolyn O. Arguillas, M.A.
Rhodora Gail T. Ilagan, Ph.D.
Amalia B. Cabusao (Doc Can.)
Robert D. Timonera
Ellen P. Alinea