Philippines to resume resupply mission to South China Sea

Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said he had instructed the military to send its resupply vessels back to the Philippines-occupied Second Thomas Shoal
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Updated 22 November 2021
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Philippines to resume resupply mission to South China Sea

MANILA: The Philippines’ defense chief said on Sunday a military resupply mission for the country’s troops stationed on an atoll in the South China Sea will resume this week, after it was aborted last week when it was blocked by Chinese coast guard.
Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said he had instructed the military to send its resupply vessels back to the Philippines-occupied Second Thomas Shoal, and that China “will not interfere” this time.
On Thursday, the Philippines condemned “in strongest terms” actions of three Chinese coast guard vessels that it said blocked and used water cannon on resupply boats headed toward Second Thomas Shoal, which is locally known as Ayungin Shoal. The US called the Chinese actions “dangerous, provocative, and unjustified,” and warned that an armed attack on Philippine vessels would invoke US mutual defense commitments.
“The Chinese will not interfere per my conversation with the Chinese ambassador (Huang Xilian),” said Lorenzana. Lorenzana said he and Huang had been talking “since the evening of the 16th while the incident was happening until yesterday, 20 November.” There will be no navy or coast guard escorts for the Philippines’ resupply boats when they sail back to Second Thomas Shoal, Lorenzana said.
“They (China) have no right to impede, prevent or harass our ships within our EEZ (exclusive economic zone), whether we are fishing or bringing supplies to our detachment in the Sierra Madre (navy ship) in Ayungin Shoal,” he said.
The chief of the Philippine military’s Western Command, Vice Admiral Ramil Roberto Enriquez, said the number of Chinese vessels in Second Thomas Shoal had gone down to two as of Saturday night from three on Tuesday.


Two British skiers among three dead in French Alps

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Two British skiers among three dead in French Alps

  • Emergency services responded quickly but could not prevent the deaths
  • Deaths followed a rare, day-long red alert across the southeastern Savoie region
GRENOBLE, France: An avalanche killed three off-piste skiers, including two Britons, in the French Alps on Friday, prosecutors said a day after several ski resorts shut down due to the risk of snowslides.
The avalanche in Val d’Isere swept away six skiers, killing one French national and the two Britons, prosecutor Benoit Bachelet said.
A third British citizen suffered minor injuries, he added.
Emergency services responded quickly but could not prevent the deaths, a resort official said, noting that all of the victims had avalanche transceivers.
There have now been at least 25 avalanche deaths in France this winter season, with the majority occurring since January.
The deaths followed a rare, day-long red alert across the southeastern Savoie region on Thursday — a danger level issued only twice before since the system was introduced 25 years ago.
The warning prompted several resorts to close all or part of their pistes.
On Friday, the red alert was lifted Friday in Savoie but the risk level remained high across the Alps, with “very unstable snow cover” especially above 1,800 (5,900 feet) to 2,000 meters altitude, according to the Meteo France weather service.
Storm Nils, which passed through France on Thursday, dumped 60-100 centimeters of snow, according to the weather service.