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Home The News News Taiwan removes military barrier as China ties warm

Taiwan removes military barrier as China ties warm

Click to enlarge pictureTAIPEI (Reuters) - Taiwan has begun removing anti-ship barricades on its offshore island of Kinmen, the latest sign of its warming relationship with China, the semi-official Central News Agency said on Sunday.

The local government of Kinmen, also known as Quemoy, has started extracting the barricades, the Taiwan agency said, in a sign of easing political tensions between Taiwan and China.

Beijing has claimed self-ruled Taiwan since 1949, when Mao Zedong's Communists won the Chinese civil war and Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists felt to Taiwan. China has vowed to bring Taiwan under its rule, by force if necessary.

The barricades are rows of spikes rooted on cement bases, slanted at an angle to stop warships from landing troops ashore.

In June, Taiwan military officials agreed to remove them ahead of a mass swim across the Taiwan Strait in mid-August between the southeast Chinese city of Xiamen and Kinmen.

Source: Reuters



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Newsflash

The radar-lock that a Chinese frigate put on a Japanese warship was “dangerous” and “provocative,” Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said yesterday, as tensions rose in a territorial row.

“It was a dangerous act that could have led to an unpredictable situation,” Abe told parliament. “It is extremely regrettable. We strongly ask for their self-restraint in order to avoid an unnecessary escalation.”

The hawkish prime minister, who took office in late December last year following a landslide election victory, described the radar-locking as a “unilateral provocative action by the Chinese side.”