China has insisted it will regulate fishing in the disputed South China Sea under its laws despite protests by neighbouring countries, a Philippine official said today.
Chinese rules which took effect this month require foreign fishermen to seek Beijing's approval to operate in the disputed waters.
Department of Foreign Affairs spokesman Raul Hernandez said the Philippines asked China to clarify the edict and was told by Beijing that it was "an implementation of China's fisheries law" and that the region was under Chinese jurisdiction.
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Vietnamese Foreign Ministry spokesman Luong Thanh Nghi has said the fishing regulation and other moves by China in recent months are "illegal and invalid" and seriously violate Vietnamese sovereignty.
The United States has criticised the Chinese regulation as "provocative and potentially dangerous." China has asked Washington to stay out of the Asian dispute.
The Philippines and Vietnam are among the most vocal critics of China's claims over the disputed waters, saying they infringe on their own 200-mile (322-kilometre) exclusive economic zones.
China and rival claimants have beefed up their navies and stepped up patrols in the disputed territories, increasing the risk of confrontation.