China Ramping Up Patrols Near Taiwan After Island’s Coast Guard Involved in Death of Two Mainlanders

China is stepping up patrols in the waters off the coast of Taiwan’s Kinmen archipelago, days after two Chinese fishermen drowned while being chased by the Taiwanese coast guard, which accused the boat of trespassing.

The Chinese coast guard’s Fujian division will regularly monitor the waters off the southern coast of the city of Xiamen — a few kilometers from Kinmen — to strengthen maritime law enforcement, said the coast guard’s spokesman, Gan Yu, in a statement Sunday.

Fishermen from Taiwan and China regularly sail that stretch of water, which has seen a rise in tensions as the number of Chinese vessels — including sand dredgers and fishing boats — have notably increased in the area.

Kinmen residents have complained of both noise and sound pollution from the vessels, as well as losses to their livelihood in fishing.

The fishermen’s deaths are unusual despite the level of Chinese activity in the waters near Kinmen, which is closer to China than it is to Taiwan’s main island.

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China claims all of self-ruled Taiwan as part of its territory.

On Wednesday, the Taiwan Coast Guard Administration said two of four Chinese fishermen died after their boat capsized. The coast guard said they were fishing about one nautical mile away from Kinmen archipelago, which Taiwan has claimed as a restricted area.

The other two survivors remain in Taiwan’s custody.

China has issued a furious condemnation and blamed Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party for the fishermen’s deaths. China said there is no such thing as “restricted” waters.

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Taiwan said an investigation was underway and that its Mainland Affairs Council said it was communicating with Chinese authorities.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office on Sunday vowed further measures but did not elaborate.

“The Mainland reserves the right to take further action, and all the consequences will be borne by Taiwan,” said Zhu Fenglian, spokesperson for the Taiwan Affairs Office.

Taiwan split from China during the 1949 civil war, but Beijing continues to regard the island of about 23 million people and a high-tech economy as Chinese territory and has been ramping up its threat to achieve that by military force if necessary.

The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.

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