Chinese border police to board ships in disputed waters
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In a move that could escalate tensions between China and some of its neighbours in the South China Sea, Beijing has authorised its border police to board and search ships entering the area it considers as its territorial waters.
Asked about a report in the state-run China Daily that police in southern Chinese island of Hainan will be authorised to board and search ships that "illegally enter the province's waters" from January, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, Hong Lei told a media briefing here today that "China has every legitimate right over its territorial area".
To another question about the Philippine government's call for the three Chinese ships in the local area of Hainan Islands to be removed, Hong said, "China has every right for its ships to been in its territorial waters, it is a normal course".
Besides the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan have disputes with China over the disputed islands in the South China Sea as well as the extent of territorial waters.
China virtually claims entire South China Sea in the Pacific as part of its territorial waters from ancient times and asserted its claims by printing the disputed portions on a map in the new e-passports being issued to its citizens.
The Philippines and Vietnam have raised objections over the maps and declined to grant visas to the holders of those passports.
India, in a counter move has been stamping the visas with a seal of Indian maps to counter Chinese claims over Arunachal Pradesh and Aksai Chin.
Vietnam has began issuing visas on separate piece of paper like the way China did in 2009 in the case of residents of Jammu and Kashmir and later retracted following India's objections.
The China Daily report said, under a set of regulation revisions the Hainan People's Congress yesterday authorised provincial border police to board or seize foreign ships that illegally enter the province's waters and order them to change course or stop sailing.
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