Support Our Cause

Enter Amount:

Newsletter Subscription






Visitors Stats

mod_vvisit_countermod_vvisit_countermod_vvisit_countermod_vvisit_countermod_vvisit_countermod_vvisit_counter
mod_vvisit_counterToday32
mod_vvisit_counterYesterday109
mod_vvisit_counterThis week141
mod_vvisit_counterThis month618
mod_vvisit_counterAll34094

Who's Online

Taiwan, China upset as boat collides with Japanese PDF Print E-mail
10 June 2008

TOKYO (AFP) — A Taiwanese fishing boat sank after colliding with a Japanese patrol vessel off a disputed island chain, causing no serious injuries but triggering concern in Beijing and Taipei, officials said.

The Japan Coast Guard said the Taiwanese boat made an abrupt move as it was speeding away out of the contested area and crashed into the Japanese boat.

But the skipper of the Taiwanese boat contended that the patrol boat rammed them.

The incident occurred near islands in the East China Sea known as the Senkaku in Japanese and the Diaoyu in Chinese. Japan administers the chain, which is claimed by Taipei and Beijing and lies near rich energy deposits.

The Japan Coast Guard said its patrol vessel Koshiki was on a routine patrol near the islands when it spotted the foreign ship, which tried to zigzag away when it collided.

Japan said the 16 people on board -- 13 fishing hobbyists and three crew members -- were taken to Ishigaki, an island in Japan's Okinawan chain some 200 kilometres (124 miles) south of the disputed territories.

One person was slightly injured and received medical care while being interrogated by Japanese authorities, chief government spokesman Nobutaka Machimura said.

Taiwan's foreign ministry later said Japan had agreed to send back the fishing sportsmen on board the boat, the Lien Ho.

"The other three people, including the skipper and two crew members of the Lien Ho, will be sent back to Taiwan after the Japanese authorities complete an investigation report," Taiwan's foreign ministry said.

The Lien Ho's skipper said his ship was rammed by the Japanese coast guard vessel and sank some six nautical miles (11 kilometres) off the Diaoyus early Tuesday morning.

Taiwan's foreign ministry spokeswoman Phoebe Yeh said the government had expressed its concerns to Tokyo about the incident.

"We also hope to clarify who's going to shoulder responsibility for the event, and the subsequent compensation issues," she said.

China, which insists Taiwan is part of its territory after the two split in 1949 at the end of a civil war, also denounced the incident.

"We urge the Japanese government to stop the illegal activities around the Diaoyu Island to prevent such things from happening again," said foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang.

The dispute between China and Japan over the islands intensified in recent years after potentially-rich gas reserves were found nearby in the East China Sea.

The two sides have failed to come up with a solution to the gas row even as Asia's two largest economies work to ease other points of friction.

Japan has claimed the uninhabited islands since 1895 when it colonised Taiwan.

The United States seized the islands in World War II and returned them to Japan in 1972 along with Okinawa, despite protests from Taipei and Beijing.

Taiwan's Yeh called for the resumption of talks between Taipei and Tokyo to resolve the issue. The two sides have held 15 rounds of negotiations since 1996 without reaching an agreement.

Comments
Add New RSS
Tony   |06-10-2008 14:23:04
Assuming that Japanese patrol boat did ram into the Taiwanese (not Chinese) boat, I find it quite amusing that China gets hot and bothered over something that the Chinese patrol boats do to Vietnamese fishermen over and over again in the Eastern Sea. So if China wants other countries to stop attacking its boats in contested waters, it'd better do the same thing with other countries.
Hoang Truong Sa   |06-11-2008 03:42:16
I agree fully and completely with Tony's opinion. China must stop attacking and killing Vietnamese fishermen in Bien Dong if it wants other countries to treat its countryfellows well at sea. This is a good chance for the Chinese to contemplate and start to behave better to their neighbours.
Tony   |06-11-2008 17:15:24
The problem is I don't think Beijing is capable of reflection. It is mostly good at trying to find ways to outplay its counterparts. I once read an article that says in the Chinese cultural mindset, winning your competitor by deception is not something to be castigated but to be extolled and praised.

Regarding the territorial disputes, when Taiwan does something that "violates" China's sovereignty, China makes warnings to Taiwan. But when Taiwan has a dispute with other countries, e.g. Japan or Southeast Asia, China and Taiwan speak with one voice. That's why in this case, China decides to make opinions even though the boat that was sank wasn't even a Chinese boat. This is what makes the situation in the Spratly Islands so complex. Taiwan continues to build infrastructure on the largest island of the Spratlys which it has occupied. If Taiwan was an independent country, it probably wouldn't have gone this far in its occupation because Taiwan has no serious claims over these islands. But in this case, Taiwan leans on China and that makes it difficult for SEA countries to take actions. This is what they call "Sleeping with the enemies".
china  - our subs   |08-26-2008 06:22:14
chinese subs and ships frequntly patrol around japanese islands, showing them that chinese military force will take necessary action against japan if they ever gone to far.
japan knows it very well, that is why u never saw a PRC vessel got sunk by JMSDF
Write comment
Name:
Email:
 
Website:
Title:
UBBCode:
[b] [i] [u] [url] [quote] [code] [img] 
 
 
:angry::0:confused::cheer:B):evil::silly::dry::lol::kiss::D:pinch:
:(:shock::X:side::):P:unsure::woohoo::huh::whistle:;):s
:!::?::idea::arrow:
 
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

3.23 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
< Prev   Next >