Taiwan Investigates Alleged Sabotage of Undersea Cable by Chinese-Linked Ship

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Taiwan Investigates Alleged Sabotage of Undersea Cable by Chinese-Linked Ship
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Taiwan authorities are investigating the alleged sabotage of an undersea cable by a Cameroonian-registered cargo ship suspected of having ties to China. The incident, which follows similar attacks on undersea infrastructure in the Baltic Sea, has raised concerns about China's growing assertiveness in the region.

The Taiwan Coast Guard is investigating an alleged sabotage of one of its undersea cable s by China . An undersea cable off the coast of Taiwan was damaged on January 3, allegedly by the Shunxin-39, a Cameroonian-registered cargo ship with suspected links to mainland China . The incident follows the alleged maritime sabotage of undersea cable s and pipelines in the Baltic Sea. Taiwan is investigating the case and accelerating efforts to bolster telecom infrastructure with satellite systems.

An undersea cable off the north-east coast of Taiwan has been damaged, with authorities blaming a Cameroonian-registered cargo ship, the Shunxin-39, as the likely culprit in the latest maritime incident. The Taiwanese Coast Guard Administration (CGA) said it dispatched a patrol boat after receiving a report from Chunghwa Telecom at 12:40pm on January 3. Despite the disruption, Chunghwa Telecom confirmed domestic communications were unaffected thanks to backup systems. The Coast Guard Administration (CGA) and Chunghwa Telecom have blamed the Shunxin-39, a reportedly Chinese-owned ship registered in Cameroon. At about 4:40pm, the CGA located the Shunxin-39 seven nautical miles north of Yehliu and ordered the vessel to return to waters outside Keelung Port for investigation. Officials conducted evidence collection but were unable to board the vessel due to adverse weather conditions. China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately respond to a request for comment. While the Shunxin-39 is registered in Cameroon, Taiwanese officials suspect it is owned by a Hong Kong-based entity with ties to mainland China. Ho Cheng-hui, chief executive of Taiwanese non-profit civil defence organisation Kuma Academy, said the incident was part of a broader strategy by China to test the limits of international tolerance through 'grey zone' tactics, according to the Taipei Times. 'China has a history of targeting Taiwan's infrastructure to probe international responses,' he said

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