Latest News

China claims Taiwan is'manipulating the facts' before they are clear about an incident involving a submarine cable cut by Taiwan

China's government claimed on Wednesday that Taiwan "manipulated" the possibility of Chinese involvement in the recent severance of an underwater communications cable. The island, it said, was making accusations before the facts had been clarified.

Taiwan, the territory that China claims, has complained repeatedly about Chinese activities in "grey zones" around the island. These include balloon overflights, sand dredging, and other methods of pressure without a direct confrontation.

Taiwan's Coast Guard said that it had detained a cargo ship with a China connection on Tuesday, after an undersea cable connecting the Penghu Islands to the Taiwan Strait in the sensitive area was cut.

Zhu Fenglian told reporters in Beijing, China's Taiwan Affairs Office spokesperson, that damages to underwater cables are a "common maritime incident" that occurs more than 100 times per year worldwide.

She said that the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) authorities deliberately exaggerated the facts in an effort to manipulate the public, and this will not be popular.

Taipei became alarmed when a ship with a Chinese connection was suspected to have damaged another cable in the first half of this year. The navy and other agencies stepped up their efforts to safeguard the underwater communication links that are crucial to the island’s connections to the outside world.

Taiwan's government, which rejects Beijing's claims of sovereignty, has drawn parallels between the damage it experienced and that caused to cables undersea in the Baltic Sea after Russia invaded Ukraine.

Taiwan has accused ships that are in fact Chinese, but fly "flags for convenience" from other countries.

Taiwan's government claimed last month that Chinese ships flying flags for convenience are "marked with evil".

Taiwan also complained of repeated patrols carried out by the Chinese coast guard around the Kinmen Islands, which Taiwan controls but are located very near the Chinese cities Xiamen & Quanzhou.

China claims the patrols were launched last year to enforce law, after two Chinese nationals drowned trying to escape Taiwan's Coast Guard after their boat had entered prohibited waters near Kinmen.

Taiwan's Coast Guard said on Wednesday that the Chinese Coast Guard had carried out such missions four times per month in average.

Taiwan's Coast Guard said that an analysis of the sailing patterns showed they were no longer 'law enforcement checks' but rather 'routine harassment.'

This has affected not only the atmosphere across Taiwan Strait but also regional peace and security. Reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Ben Blanchard, Taipei, writing and reporting; Michael Perry and SonaliPaul editing.

(source: Reuters)