‘No foreign armed forces can tell me to stay out,’ says Lacson on China warning en route to Pag-asa
MANILA, Philippines — Presidential aspirant Senator Panfilo Lacson said he “never considered backing out” from his visit to Pag-asa Island despite the warning that his and his team’s plane received from the Chinese Navy on their way there.
“This is my country and no foreign armed forces can tell me to stay out,” Lacson said in a statement Monday.
In a tweet Sunday, the senator said the Chinese Navy “had no right” to shoo away their plane.
“Being radio challenged by a Chinese Coast Guard vessel stationed more than three nautical miles off the coast of Pag-asa, I never considered backing out. Aside from the possibility of being fired at being remote, this is my country, not theirs. They had no right. That was my mindset,” he said.
The Chinese Navy radioed Lacson’s plane the following message: “You are approaching our military zone. Please stay away from the area and leave immediately. Your actions are unfriendly and dangerous. Your actions are dangerous.”
Article continues after this advertisementLacson also recalled receiving an “unusual” text message saying “Welcome to China” as they landed on the island.
Article continues after this advertisementThe senator’s visit to Pag-asa comes after Chinese Coast Guard vessels “blocked and water cannoned” two Philippine vessels transporting supplies to military personnel in Ayungin Shoal last. Nov. 16.
Lacson described the Nov. 16 incident as “totally unacceptable, even pathetic, on the part of our people involved in the resupply mission to Ayungin Shoal.”
Lacson, who chairs the Senate national defense and security committee, reiterated the need for balance of power in the West Philippine Sea to allow the Philippines to exercise its sovereign rights over its exclusive economic zone.
During his visit to Pag-asa Island Saturday, Lacson led a flag-raising ceremony and planted three Philippine flags and had a dialogue with the residents and the Armed Forces of the Philippines personnel stationed in the island to get their views on the West Philippine Sea issue.
In a meeting with Western Command officials led by Vice Admiral Ramil Roberto Enriquez, Lacson suggested that they “influence our national leadership” to go in the direction of maintaining a balance of power through strengthened and expanded alliances with better equipped and militarily capable countries, which like the Philippines, espouse freedom of navigation in the West Philippine Sea.