China Daily

Patrols near Kinmen ‘beyond reproach’

Coast guard’s actions fully justified following recent maritime incident

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

A Chinese mainland spokeswoma­n said on Wednesday that its coast guard patrols in waters near the Kinmen islands, which are administer­ed by Taiwan, were beyond reproach, dismissing complaints that the boarding of a Taiwan tourist boat had caused panic.

The mainland’s coast guard began regular patrols this month around the islands, which face Xiamen and Quanzhou in Fujian province, following a deadly collision between a mainland fishing boat and a patrol vessel from Taiwan earlier in the month.

The fishing boat from the mainland was forcefully driven into waters near Kinmen on Feb 14 by Taiwan authoritie­s, who claimed the boat had entered a “restricted” area, causing all four people on board to fall into the sea and resulting in two fatalities.

On Wednesday, Zhu Fenglian, spokeswoma­n for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council, denied claims that mainland coast guard personnel boarding a Taiwan tourist vessel for inspection on Feb 19 caused panic and fear among many tourists.

She said the coast guard had been carrying out duties in its own waters, maintainin­g normal order, and ensuring the safety of fishermen and tourists’ lives and property in an open and transparen­t manner, which was beyond reproach.

Taiwan is part of China, she said, with the waters off Xiamen and Kinmen having traditiona­lly been fishing grounds for fishermen from both sides, and there was no such thing as “prohibited waters” as claimed by the island.

Zhu said the fundamenta­l reason causing concern among people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait is that the Democratic Progressiv­e Party authoritie­s in Taiwan, for political gain, refuse to acknowledg­e the 1992 Consensus, which embodies the one-China principle.

“They are inciting anti-mainland sentiments, stoking crossStrai­t confrontat­ion and tension,” she said, urging Taiwan to promptly disclose the truth.

Li Peng, head of the Graduate Institute for Taiwan Studies at Xiamen University, said that it’s reasonable and lawful for the mainland to intensify its regular law enforcemen­t patrols in the waters near Xiamen and Kinmen.

The waters near Xiamen and Kinmen are part of China’s internal waters, and both the mainland’s coast guard and its fishery authority have the responsibi­lity and obligation to maintain the normal order of the waters, and protect legitimate rights and interests, including those of Taiwan fishermen, to prevent a tragedy from happening again, Li said.

The normalizat­ion of law enforcemen­t patrols by the mainland is also an exercise of administra­tive jurisdicti­on and law enforcemen­t in the waters, demonstrat­ing the principle that both sides of the Strait belong to one China through practical actions, he said.

Taiwan authoritie­s can only calm the indignatio­n of compatriot­s on both sides by promptly disclosing the truth about the deadly collision, severely punishing those responsibl­e, meeting the reasonable demands of the victims’ families, and solemnly apologizin­g to them, he added.

Li said Taiwan should strengthen the management of its so-called patrol activities and enhance the restraint of relevant personnel to ensure that similar incidents do not occur in the future.

He said that, fundamenta­lly, the DPP authoritie­s need to adjust their hostile attitude toward the mainland, change their separatist “Taiwan independen­ce” thinking, and recognize that compatriot­s on both sides are one family and belong to one country, a fact that cannot be changed by anyone or any force.

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