logo
Satellite images reveal China's mysterious structures being used for territorial land grab

Satellite images reveal China's mysterious structures being used for territorial land grab

Daily Mail​25-04-2025
China is using a series of steel structures to lay claim to a disputed area of the Yellow Sea, South Korea has claimed.
Seoul is considering setting up countermeasures to three Chinese installations erected off the west coast of the Korean Peninsula.
South Korea's Foreign Ministry expressed 'deep concern' over what some experts have referred to as an encroachment on their territorial waters.
Satellite images show that the sea rig has been installed in an area where the two nations' exclusive economic zones overlap.
The structure, which is an old French oil rig with a helicopter landing pad, is located near the Chinese Shenlan-1 and Shenlan-2 platforms.
They are all built in the Yellow Sea, which serves as a vital corridor for trade, fisheries and military navigation.
South Korean officials said they conveyed their concerns to Chinese officials during a scheduled meeting on Wednesday.
Beijing have insisted the structure is a fish farm support facility and dismissed any notion that it has to do with territorial rights.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said yesterday that the facility was 'in compliance with domestic and international law,' and 'unrelated to bilateral maritime delimitation.'
'The construction does not contravene the agreement between China and South Korea,' Guo told reporters, adding that Beijing was 'willing to work with Seoul to enhance dialogue and communication and properly address relevant issues.'
'The structure is within both Chinese and international law and does not violate the China-South Korea fisheries agreement,' the Chinese embassy in Seoul said in a statement last month.
But South Korea's public broadcaster KBS have reported that Seoul's survey vessels have been prevented from approaching the strcutures by the Chinese coast guard.
There are now growing worries among South Korean politicians and anti-Beijing campaigners that China is quietly infringing on foreign territory.
Luke De Pulford, the Executive Director of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, told MailOnline: ' Beijing pretends not to be expansionist yet expends huge resources making ludicrous claims to other countries' territories and international waters.
'The Second Thomas Shoal, South China Sea, and now this. If we fail to deter this aggression, we will only have ourselves to blame when escalation follows.'
The structures are located in the provisional measures zone, a disputed area where, under an agreement signed in 2001, fishing boats are permitted to operate.
The agreement, however, expressly forbids the construction of facilities as well as searching for or developing natural resources in the area.
In 2020, Beijing unilaterally declared the zone to be its 'internal waters'.
Na Kyung-won, a member of parliament from South Korea's ruling People Power Party, said: 'What China is doing — installing artificial structures in disputed waters and blocking access — is a gangster-style tactic used in the South and East China Seas.
'It's clear they are now trying to turn the Yellow Sea into a grey zone to support their territorial claims.
'A firm and stern response is needed to address China's unfair attempts to change the status quo.'
In 2014, China sparked similar fury after a Chinese oil platform carried out drilling within Vietnam's exclusive economic zone in the disputed Paracel Islands in the South China Sea.
After a standoff between the two nations, China withdrew the platform a month earlier than originally planned.
Beijing has also anchored large buoy's within Japan's exclusive economic zone, claiming they are weather and ocean monitoring devices.
'This is a clandestine tactic to claim our waters inch by inch and restrict the operations of the US-South Korea alliance,' Jaewoo Choo, head of the China Research Center at the Korea Research Institute for National Security think-tank in Seoul, told the Financial Times.
Nam Sung-wook, a professor at the Graduate School of Public Administration at Korea University, added: 'We should have taken action sooner.
'If any country doesn't respond to such territorial issues immediately, it becomes a fait accompli.'
Both countries agreed to continue consultations on the matter at all levels, with a mutual understanding that the issue should not hinder broader bilateral relations, Seoul's Foreign Ministry said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bernard Arnault hopes for luxury turnaround
Bernard Arnault hopes for luxury turnaround

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bernard Arnault hopes for luxury turnaround

Bernard Arnault is hoping for a turnaround when his luxury empire updates investors. The wealth of the Frenchman (pictured with Ivanka Trump), whose empire includes Louis Vuitton and Dior, has fallen by more than £15billion this year. But he is still one of the world's richest men - worth £116billion despite a 26 per cent slide in LVMH shares. On Thursday LVMH, whose sales fell earlier this year, announces its second-quarter figures. Arnault, who attended Donald Trump's inauguration, hoped rich Americans splashing out would offset a slowdown in China. But demand has been hit by trade war tension between the US and China. Its alcohol brands, such as Moet champagne, have also been hit hard by tariffs and waning demand.

Trump, Xi might meet ahead of or during October APEC summit in South Korea, SCMP reports
Trump, Xi might meet ahead of or during October APEC summit in South Korea, SCMP reports

Reuters

time6 hours ago

  • Reuters

Trump, Xi might meet ahead of or during October APEC summit in South Korea, SCMP reports

July 20 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump might visit China before going to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit between October 30 and November 1, or he could meet Chinese leader Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the APEC event in South Korea, the South China Morning Post reported on Sunday citing multiple sources. The two countries have been trying to negotiate an end to an escalating tit-for-tat tariff war that has upended global trade and supply chains. Trump has sought to impose tariffs on U.S. importers for virtually all foreign goods, which he says will stimulate domestic manufacturing and which critics say will instead make many consumer goods more expensive for Americans. He has called for a universal base tariff rate of 10% on goods imported from all countries, with higher rates for imports from the most "problematic" ones, including China: imports from there now have the highest tariff rate of 55%. Trump has set a deadline of August 12 for the U.S. and China to reach a durable tariffs agreement. A spokesperson for Trump did not respond to a request for comment about the reported plans for a meeting with Xi in the fall.

South Korean prosecutors seek drone chief's arrest over operation in North
South Korean prosecutors seek drone chief's arrest over operation in North

Reuters

time11 hours ago

  • Reuters

South Korean prosecutors seek drone chief's arrest over operation in North

SEOUL, July 20 (Reuters) - South Korean prosecutors said on Sunday they had sought court approval to detain the head of a military drone unit as part of an investigation into former President Yoon Suk Yeol and drone operations in neighbouring North Korea. Prosecutors stepped up a probe into the drone operation after indicting the jailed ex-President Yoon on Saturday on additional charges for his short-lived declaration of martial law in December. They had summoned the unit's chief, Kim Yong-dae, on Thursday regarding accusations that Yoon ordered a covert drone operation into the North last year to inflame tension between the neighbours to justify his martial law decree. Yoon has denied the accusations. Kim told reporters the incident was part of a "clandestine military operation" in response to trash balloons sent from the North and not intended to provoke the neighbouring nation. In October, North Korea said the South had sent drones to scatter anti-North Korea leaflets over Pyongyang, and published photos of the remains of a crashed South Korean military drone. South Korea at the time declined to disclose whether it had sent the drones. In a statement on Sunday, the prosecution office said it had sought an arrest warrant for Kim. Media said a court hearing is planned for Monday afternoon to review the request for a warrant. He was arrested on Friday without a court warrant, media said. Prosecutors and police are permitted to make an "emergency arrest" if they have a strong belief someone is guilty of a serious crime and may flee or destroy evidence.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store