Business World

Taiwan says China triggered panic by boarding tourist boat

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TAIPEI — The boarding of a Taiwanese tourist boat by China’s coast guard near sensitive frontline islands triggered “panic” among Taiwan’s people, a government minister said on Tuesday, but Taiwan’s military added it was not planning to get involved.

Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory despite the island’s rejection, has been wary of efforts by Beijing to ramp up pressure on Taipei following the election last month of Lai Ching-te as president, a man Beijing views as a dangerous separatist.

China announced on Sunday that its coast guard would begin regular patrols and set up law enforcemen­t activity around the Taiwan-controlled Kinmen islands, after two Chinese nationals fleeing Taiwan’s coast guard and who entered restricted waters too close to Kinmen were killed.

Six Chinese coast guard officers on Monday boarded a Taiwanese tourist boat carrying 11 crew members and 23 passengers to check its route plan, certificat­e and crew licenses, leaving around half-an-hour later, Taiwan’s coast guard said.

“We think it has harmed our people’s feelings and triggered people’s panic. That was also not in line with the interest of the people across the strait,” Kuan Bi-ling, head of Taiwan’s Ocean Affairs Council, told reporters on the sidelines of parliament in Taipei on Tuesday.

China’s coast guard, which has no publicly available contact details, has yet to comment. China’s Taiwan Affairs Office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Ms. Kuan said it was common for Chinese and Taiwanese tourist boats to accidental­ly entered the other side’s waters.

“Boats like these are not illegal at all,” she said.

Kinmen is a short boat ride from the Chinese cities of Xiamen and Quanzhou and has been controlled by Taipei since the defeated Republic of China government fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with Mao Zedong’s communists, who set up the People’s Republic of China.

Kinmen is home to a large Taiwanese military garrison, but it is Taiwan’s coast guard which patrols its waters.

Taiwan Defense Minister Chiu Kuo-cheng told reporters at parliament that to avoid a further rise in tensions the military will not “actively intervene” in the incident.

“Let’s handle the matter peacefully,” he said. “Not escalating tensions is our response.”

Kinmen was the site of frequent fighting during the height of the Cold War but is now a popular tourist destinatio­n, though many of its islets are heavily fortified by Taiwanese forces and remain off limits to civilians.

China says it does not recognize any restricted or banned zones for its fishermen around Kinmen.

China’s military has over the past four years regularly sent warplanes and warships into the skies and seas around Taiwan as it seeks to assert Beijing’s sovereignt­y claims and has continued to do so following last month’s election.

However, a senior Taiwan security official, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the media, told Reuters they believe China did not want to turn what was happening around Kinmen into an “internatio­nal incident.” The official said Beijing seized on the Kinmen incident with the deaths of the two Chinese nationals an “excuse” to further pile pressure on Lai Ching te.

The pressure has also included Taiwan losing one of its few remaining diplomatic allies Nauru to China and a change in a flight path in the Taiwan Strait —

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