South China Sea: Beijing using 'fishing militia' to expand presence in disputed waters
Karthick Arvinth
Fishing boats with Chinese national flags seen at a harbour in Tanmen, Hainan province
Reuters
China is using a fleet of fishing boats to conduct maritime exercises
in disputed waters in the South China Sea, a report says.
Military-trained fishermen are deployed on tiny boats from Hainan Island
to gather information on foreign vessels sailing through the South
China Sea, according to Reuters.
It said the vessels are equipped with Global Positioning Satellite
equipment — so they can establish contact with the Chinese coast guard
in case of emergencies — while some carry small arms.
"The maritime
militia is expanding because of the country's need for it, and because
of the desire of the fishermen to engage in national service, protecting
our country's interests," an adviser to the Hainan government
told the Reuters agency.
The unnamed adviser added that fishermen are paid for undergoing
basic military training, which includes search and rescue operations,
tackling disasters at sea and "safeguarding Chinese sovereignty".
The Hainan government also reportedly subsidises fishermen to
encourage them to use sturdier boats equipped with a steel hull rather
than a wooden one.
Increasing tensions
The report comes amid increasing maritime tensions between a host of
countries in the region and China, which claims almost the entirety of
the South China Sea for itself.
Beijing has built several artificial islands in the midst of a reef
system in the region known as the Spratly Islands — increasing tension
with Taiwan, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia and Brunei, who all have
overlapping claims on the territory.
The US aircraft carrier USS Stennis was denied entry to a Hong Kong port by China last week
ReutersThe US has
conducted several navigation exercises in the South China Sea, through
which about $5tn (£3.4tn) trade passes annually, to challenge Chinese
territorial claims.
There is increasing international concern that the continuing animosity between Washington and Beijing in the region could spark a major naval conflagration.
Last week, Chinese authorities rejected a US aircraft carrier, the
USS John C Stennis, and its four escort vessels entry into a Hong Kong
port for unspecified reasons. The move came two weeks after US Defence
Secretary Ash Carter criticised Beijing's South China Sea policy during a
visit to the Stennis.
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