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China, Philippines launch rescue missions for distressed cargo ship near Scarborough Shoal

By Thomson Reuters Jan 22, 2026 | 9:13 PM

(Corrects to show that 17 total crew members were rescued and two later died, not that two crew died and 17 were rescued, in paragraph 2)

BEIJING, ‍Jan 23 (Reuters) – China and the Philippines said on Friday they launched rescue operations after receiving reports of a distressed cargo ship near the Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea which was carrying 21 Philippine crew members.

The Chinese military said 17 crew members were rescued ‌and two of them later died, after ‌a report around 1:30 a.m. on Friday (1730 GMT on Thursday) that a foreign cargo vessel had capsized in waters near the shoal. It dispatched aircraft to conduct searches and the Chinese Coast Guard sent ​two vessels for rescue efforts.

One person was receiving emergency medical treatment, it said, adding that China’s maritime authorities were ‍organising additional rescue forces to head ​to the area.

The Philippine Coast Guard said it ​deployed two vessels and two aircraft to rescue the Philippine crew ‍from a Singaporean-flagged cargo vessel loaded with iron ore that was en route to southern Chinese city of Yangjiang.

“The PCG Command Center acquired information from the Hong Kong Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre that 10 of the 21 Filipino crew members ‍were rescued by a passing China Coast Guard vessel,” it said.

Scarborough Shoal is one of Asia’s most contested maritime features and a ‍frequent flashpoint in disputes ‍over sovereignty and fishing rights.

On Tuesday, the ​Chinese military said it organised naval and air ​force ⁠units to drive away a Philippine government ‌aircraft that it accused of “illegally intruding” into airspace over the atoll.

China claims almost the entire South China Sea, overlapping the exclusive economic zones of Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.

(Reporting by Beijing Newsroom and Karen Lema in Manila; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman, Raju Gopalakrishnan ⁠and Michael Perry)