CHINA - PHILIPPINES - VIETNAM
After new passports with distorted maps,
the communist regime announced that the Coast Guard of Hainan province can dock
and control vessels for non-Chinese "who illegally enter territorial waters."
The reference is to the maritime areas that Beijing is trying to snatch
unilaterally from other governments in the area.
Beijing (AsiaNews) - The Chinese central government will allow the police in
the southern province of Hainan to board and control foreign ships that enter
into what Beijing (one-sidedly) now regards as its own territorial waters. The
reference is to the disputed areas in the South China Sea, which China is trying
to snatch from the governments of Taiwan, Vietnam, India, Brunei, Malaysia and
the Philippines.
The new law will go into effect January 1. According to the China
Daily - a government newspaper - the rules will allow the coast guard of
the province (consisting of a group of islands) to "board and make an inspection
of those foreign ships illegally entering Chinese waters. Entering those waters
without permission, damaging coastal defensive positions and threatening
national security are illegal acts."
The decision comes just days after the new, contested national passports. In
total silence by the media and the government, the Communist regime has in fact
made a new document for travel abroad: the passport map includes territorial
portions that follow the so-called "cow's tongue" which annexes - unilaterally
by the Beijing authorities - the Spratly Islands, as well as the island of
Taiwan and part of the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh and portions of the
Himalayan region.
Beijing says that the map "is not aimed at any nation in particular" and is
trying to tone down the controversy, which is increasingly taking on the scope
of an international diplomatic row. The Indian government has already branded
the initiative as "unacceptable"; in response, the customs officials in New
Delhi grant entry into the Indian territory by stamping onto passports a "local
version" of the map, which also includes areas at the center of contention.
Taiwan, too, is not hiding its fears because, as Taipei explains, affixing a
visa to the passport implies the tacit acceptance of the map imprinted there.
The two governments have officially protested through diplomatic channels.
Manila has joined them; yesterday it said that it "had no intention of stamping"
the new passports: "If we did," said the Philippine Department of Foreign
Affairs, "it would be as if we accepted the Chinese territorial claims."
Military tensions are being added to the diplomatic ones. Yesterday, the
Chinese naval fleet stationed in the eastern part of the country crossed the
waters of the Strait of Miyako - in Japan - to reach some Russian ships engaged
in military exercises in the Pacific. Although Beijing had announced the
beginning of the exercises, they are seen as an attempt to intimidate its
neighbours.
China recognizes its strength both financially and militarily and by claiming new territory on its own accord it's challenging its neighbors. This recent aggressive behavior by china could stem from the challenge by japan earlier this year Over a chain of disputed islands. With the new communist ruling bloc on the plate, this may just be an attempt to puff out their chests.
ReplyDelete-Alan