Philippines accuses China of poisoning disputed waters with cyanide

Manila, Philippines - The Philippines accused Chinese fishermen on Monday of pouring cyanide in waters in the Spratly Islands, a flashpoint in the disputed South China Sea that has been the site of violent confrontations with Chinese vessels.

Philippine Navy spokesperson Rear Admiral Roy Vincent Trinidad speaks next to a slide presentation of seized yellow bottles suspected to contain cyanide in the waters of Second Thomas Shoal in the South China Sea, during a press conference in Manila on April 13, 2026.  © TED ALJIBE / AFP

Beijing claims the strategic South China Sea in nearly its entirety, despite an international ruling that its assertion has no legal basis.

The Philippines' National Security Council (NSC) alleged the poisoning began last year around Second Thomas Shoal in the Spratly chain, which sits near vital shipping lanes and is reputedly rich in minerals.

"The use of cyanide on Ayungin Shoal is a term of sabotage that seeks to kill local fish populations, depriving Navy personnel of a vital food source," NSC assistant director-general Cornelio Valencia told a news conference, using the Philippines' term for the reef.

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These actions also "threaten our Navy personnel" through exposure to contaminated water, eating poisoned fish, as well as eroding corals, Valencia added.

Manila and Beijing have a long history of maritime territorial disputes in the hotly contested waterway, including a violent clash in June 2024 in which Chinese coastguard personnel wielding knives, sticks, and an axe boarded Philippine Navy boats.

Valencia said Manila raised the alleged poisoning with Beijing at a recent meeting but has received no formal reply.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning called the Philippines' claim "sheer fabrication," adding that Beijing "attaches great importance to the protection of the environment and the preservation of fishing resources."

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Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning has denied the Philippines' poisoning allegations.  © PEDRO PARDO / AFP

Valencia said that reef damage from cyanide poisoning could also compromise the structural foundations of the BRP Sierra Madre, a World War II-era warship on which the Filipino troops are stationed.

Manila deliberately grounded the vessel on the shoal in 1999 to stake its claim to the territory.

Philippine Navy spokesperson Rear Admiral Roy Vincent Trinidad said Filipino troops had seized 10 bottles of cyanide from sampan boats launched from Chinese fishing ships in February, July, and October 2025.

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He said that soldiers observed another Chinese sampan crew poisoning waters near the shoal last month, adding that the shoal's waters later tested positive for cyanide.

None of the troops aboard the warship have tested positive for the poison, Trinidad added.

Valencia and Trinidad both alleged the fishermen's mother ships worked for the Chinese Navy.

Valencia said the NSC planned to submit a report next week to the Philippine foreign ministry which could become the basis for a diplomatic protest.

Manila has also ordered the navy and coastguard to step up patrols "to prevent further environmental harm" in the area, he added.

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