MANILA, Philippines – The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) on Tuesday debunked claims that a tugboat had towed the BRP Sierra Madre in Ayungin (Second Thomas) Shoal.
Rear Admiral Roy Vincent Trinidad, AFP spokesman for the West Philippine Sea (WPS), said the Philippine Navy (PN) and the AFP monitored the presence of a tugboat on Monday but said it was neither “a cause for alarm” nor reason to believe that the rusting but still standing Philippine military outpost in the disputed reef could be towed just like that., This news data comes from:http://www.jyxingfa.com
‘It would take more than a tug boat to tow the BRP Sierra Madre,” Trinidad said on Tuesday.
“Our assessment is that this would be for their own use in the event that they would need to tug any of the ships that would run aground in the shallow portion of Ayungin Shoal,” Trinidad said.
BRP Sierra Madre is a World War II US landing ship originally known as USS LST-821 that was transferred to the Philippine government in the ‘70s after serving in the Vietnam war.
In 1999, it was purposely run aground in Ayungin Shoal to establish Philippine military presence and affirm its territorial claims in the Spratly Islands, a WPS feature claimed by China.

Although obviously dilapidated, the 328-feet ship is firmly marooned on the Ayungin reef and is almost impossible to move.
AFP: It would take more than a tugboat to tow BRP Sierra Madre from Ayungin Shoal
- Fears of new political crisis grip France
- Social pension eyed for indigent seniors
- President Marcos Jr. visits Cambodia to strengthen ties
- Police brutality fuels soaring tensions in Indonesia
- No winner in Grand, Megalotto draws for Aug 27
- Pagasa sees two to four tropical cyclones hitting Philippines in September
- Manila marks National Heroes Day with job fair
- New DPWH chief Dizon: "A department can't investigate itself"
- North Korea's Kim Jong Un travels to Beijing to watch military parade alongside Putin, Xi Jinping
- House suspends DPWH budget deliberations pending submission of changes by agency, DBM