Taiwan coast guard ramps up island patrols ahead of inauguration

Taiwan coast guard ramps up island patrols ahead of inauguration

Tourists sit near anti-landing spikes placed on the beach before the Chinese city of Xiamen, in Taiwan’s Kinmen on May 18, 2024. Spikes jut from the beaches of Taiwan’s Kinmen island, military checkpoints serve as traffic roundabouts and bunkers double up as tourist cafes — reminders everywhere of the conflict decades earlier with Chinese communist forces. Agence France-Presse

KINMEN — Taipei’s coast guard ramped up patrols over the weekend around its outlying islands that have seen increased presence of Chinese vessels, the agency said Sunday, the eve of Lai Ching-te’s inauguration as Taiwan’s new president.

China claims democratic Taiwan as part of its territory, maintaining a near-daily military presence with frequent appearances of fighter jets, drones and naval ships around the island.

It has also in recent months sent in Chinese coast guard ships around Kinmen, an outlying island administered by Taipei located just five kilometers (three miles) from the Chinese city of Xiamen.

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Taipei’s Coast Guard Administration said on Sunday they have sent out personnel to “patrol all hours of the day and night” around Taiwan’s three major outlying islands: Kinmen, Matsu and Penghu.

“In order to ensure the security of the sea area and border safety during the inauguration ceremony, the Ocean Affairs Council’s Coast Guard Administration’s Kinmen-Matsu-Penghu Division once again implemented a powerful patrol operation… to closely monitor suspicious targets,” it said in a statement.

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“The Kinmen-Matsu-Penghu Division said that the national security work will not slacken during the important celebrations,” it added.

Kinmen has been the site of ramped up tensions after Lai — who China has branded a “dangerous separatist” — was elected in Taiwan’s January elections.

A deadly fishing incident in February involving a Chinese speedboat kicked off a row between China and Taiwan, which has yet to be resolved.

It was carrying four people and capsized on February 14 near Kinmen while Taiwan’s coast guard was pursuing it, leaving two dead.

Taipei’s coast guard had defended its actions, saying the boat was within “prohibited waters” and zigzagging before it capsized, but Beijing has accused Taipei of “hiding the truth” about the incident.

China has since stepped up patrols around Kinmen.

At least five formations of official Chinese ships have briefly sailed through Kinmen’s restricted waters this month.

On the eve of Lai’s inauguration, Taipei’s defense ministry said it had detected seven Chinese aircraft and seven naval vessels around Taiwan in the 24-hour period leading up to 06:00 am (2200 GMT) Sunday.

Across the strait in the Chinese seaside city of Pingtan — also home to a military base — AFP reporters saw at least two military transport helicopters fly overhead Sunday morning.

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