MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Philippines blamed Chinese fishermen on Monday for a massive loss of giant clams in a disputed shoal controlled by China’s coast guard in the South China Sea and urged an international inquiry into the amount of environmental damage in the area. The Philippine coast guard presented surveillance photographs of Chinese fishermen harvesting large numbers of giant clams for a number of years in a lagoon at Scarborough Shoal, but said signs of such activities stopped in March 2019. Parts of the surrounding coral appeared to be badly scarred, in what the coast guard said was apparently a futile search by the Chinese for more clams. The lagoon is a prominent fishing area which Filipinos call Bajo de Masinloc and the Chinese calll Huangyan Dao off the northwestern Philippines. “Those were the last remaining giant clams that we saw in Bajo de Masinloc,” Philippine coast guard spokesperson Commodore Jay Tarriela said at a news conference. |
Qingdao top Shandong to seal playoffs spot in CBACalifornia is joining with a New Jersey company to buy a generic opioid overdose reversal drugFormer head of Chinese Football Association sentenced to lifeChina defender Zhang backtracks on retirement claimParis 2024 countdown 100 days: moving forward amid expectationsWang, Lin move into ITTF World Cup knockout stageSnowfall disrupts transport in central, eastern China amid travel rushCourtois has surgery after another knee injuryChina's road, water passenger trips plunge in Jan.Yang sets national record in women's 100m freestyle