Taiwan asks Google to blur image of disputed island
TAIPEI—Taiwan’s defense ministry has asked Google to blur images of a new development believed to be for military use on a disputed South China Sea island.
Tensions remain high in the region over conflicting territorial claims, particularly over the strategically important Spratlys chain.
Taiwan administers Taiping Island, which is the largest in the Spratlys archipelago. The island chain is also claimed in part or whole by the Philippines, Vietnam and China.
Google satellite images show a circular structure with four Yshaped attachments, jutting out to sea on Taiping’s northwestern coast.
The development comes after Taiwan last year inaugurated a solar-powered lighthouse, an expanded airstrip and a pier as part of efforts to strengthen defense capabilities on Taiping.
Classified info
The defense ministry said it was in the process of contacting Google on Thursday to ask them to blur the satellite images, but it would not comment further on what the structures were.
“It is classified information,” the ministry’s spokesperson, Chen Chung-chi, said when asked the reason for the request to Google, which was made after images of the structures surfaced in local media.
Fears over possible military confrontation in the area have grown since an international tribunal ruling in July which rejected Beijing’s sweeping claims to almost all of the South China Sea—even waters approaching coasts of the Philippines and other Southeast Asian nations.
China outlines its territory using a vague map that emerged in the 1940s, resulting in an overlap with Taiwan’s claims.
The two sides split in 1949 after a civil war on the mainland, but Beijing still sees Taiwan as part of its territory.
Beijing angrily vowed to ignore the verdict from the tribunal in The Hague, prompting a warning from US President Barack Obama who emphasized that the ruling was binding.