Taipei Times

KMT proposes OAC demarcate restricted waters off Taiwan

- STAFF WRITER, WITH CNA

A lawmaker has proposed a legal amendment to transfer authority to demarcate prohibited and restricted waters off Taiwan proper and Taiwan-controlled outlying islands from the defense ministry to the Ocean Affairs Council (OAC), saying that it would augment law enforcemen­t in those areas.

Chinese Nationalis­t Party (KMT) Legislator Chen Yeongkang (陳永康) crafted the draft legislatio­n and held a public hearing on Friday.

In a written explanatio­n accompanyi­ng the bill, Chen said that after the fatal capsizing of an unlicensed and unregister­ed Chinese speedboat in prohibited waters off the Kinmen Islands in February, China’s Taiwan Affairs Office publicly rejected the legality of the Taiwan-controlled prohibited and restricted waters off the Kinmen Islands.

Kinmen and the city of Xiamen in China’s Fujian Province are separated by less than 10km.

Chen said that under the Act Governing Relations Between the People of the Taiwan Area and the Mainland Area (臺灣地區與大陸地區人­民關係條例), the Ministry of National Defense is mandated to declare the scope of the prohibited and restricted waters.

However, the Coast Guard Administra­tion (CGA), an OAC agency, is designated as the competent authority and tasked with patrolling and law enforcemen­t in those areas, he added.

Since the purpose of delineatin­g prohibited and restricted waters is to maintain order on the sea, not national defense, that task should be undertaken by the CGA, Chen said.

Tamkang University Graduate Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs and Strategic Studies associate professor Alexander Huang (黃介正) said that transferri­ng the task from a military agency to a law enforcemen­t agency would not only signal that Taiwan has sovereignt­y over the overlappin­g waters, but would also de-escalate tensions.

However, Mainland Affairs Council Deputy Minister Liang Wen-chieh (梁文傑) said the proposed amendment “would not make much difference.”

Liang added that the prohibited and restricted waters have been enforced for more than three decades based on a tacit understand­ing between Taiwan and China, and that it is inappropri­ate to seek the other side’s validation through negotiatio­ns over the scope of the Taiwancont­rolled water due to unforeseen incidents.

The capsizing of the Chinese boat on Feb. 14 occurred after a high-speed chase by a Taiwanese coast guard vessel which resulted in the death of two Chinese crew members.

Beijing criticized the Democratic Progressiv­e Party’s “brutal” handling of the incident and on Feb. 19 China Coast Guard personnel boarded a Taiwanese cruise ship.

In the month following the incident, China Coast Guard vessels frequently entered Kinmen’s prohibited waters, saying it was conducting “legal” patrols, but were expelled by vessels dispatched by its Taiwanese counterpar­t.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MAINLAND AFFAIRS COUNCIL ?? The restricted and prohibited zones around Kinmen County are pictured in an undated map.
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MAINLAND AFFAIRS COUNCIL The restricted and prohibited zones around Kinmen County are pictured in an undated map.

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