
China probe finds Taiwanese men controlled ship that cut undersea cables
China probe finds Taiwanese men controlled ship that cut undersea cables Chinese officials claim Taiwanese smugglers are to blame for February incident Taipei says was an act of hybrid warfare. China has accused two Taiwanese nationals of leading a smuggling âoperation involving a âChinese-crewed vessel that damaged subsea cables in February, in an incident that has stoked tensions between the countries. The public security bureau in Weihai, in Chinaâs eastern Shandong province, said on Wednesday that a probe into the incident showed that two Taiwanese men had been operating the ship involved - the Togo-registered Hong Tai 58 - as part of a longstanding operation smuggling frozen goods into China. Recommended Stories list of 3 items list 1 of 3 As undersea cables break off Europe and Taiwan, proving sabotage is tough list 2 of 3 US approves $11bn in arms sales to Taiwan in deal likely to anger China list 3 of 3 Taiwan charges captain of China-linked ship with damaging subsea cable In comments carried in Chinese state media, Chinaâs Taiwan Affairs Office âaccused Taiwanâs governing Democratic Progressive Party of falsely claiming that Beijing had used the Hong Tai 58 to deliberately sabotage an undersea cable off the island in a bid âto stir cross-Strait confrontationâ. Taiwan has accused Beijing of severing the cable as a so-called âgrey zoneâ or âhybrid warfareâ tactic to apply pressure on the self-ruled island of 23 million people, which China views as its territory. The terms refer to low-grade coercive acts such as sabotage that hold a certain degree of plausible deniability. But China has denied its involvement, calling the incident a âcommonâ maritime occurrence that has been âexaggeratedâ by Taiwanese authorities. In June, a Taiwanese court sentenced the Chinese captain of the Hong Tai 58 to three years in â jail after finding him guilty of intentionally damaging the cables off Taiwan. Seven Chinese crew members were sent back to China without charge, and were interviewed by authorities on the mainland as part of their probe into the incident. Reward offered Announcing the probeâs findings, the Weihai public security bureau offered a reward of up to 250,000 yuan ($35,569) for information âor assistance regarding the Taiwanese suspects, who it said had the surnames Chien and Chen. The pair had been on a Chinese customs office wanted list since 2014, it added. Taiwanâs Mainland Affairs Council said the Chinese Communist Party does not have jurisdiction over Taiwan and urged the Chinese authorities to provide concrete evidence if they had it. âIn the absence of concrete evidence, publicly announcing ânames and offering rewards is not a civilized practice,â it âsaid in a statement. âIt is merely another instance of cross-border repression and political manipulation.â Subsea cables are the backbone of the internet and global telecoms industry , carrying nearly all of the worldâs internet traffic, but are also susceptible to breakdowns from movements on the sea floor or human activity. Between 100 and 200 cable breakdowns occur each year, according to industry data, and...
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