Taiwan charges Chinese captain in first-ever undersea cable sabotage case
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Apr 11, 2025
Taiwan charges Chinese captain over cable damage, its first criminal case amid increased disruption in undersea communications.
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A cargo ship lingered off Taiwan's coast for days, ignoring repeated calls from the Coast Guard
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Then a vital undersea cable went dark. Months later, that moment is now the focus of a case unlike any Taiwan has pursued before
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Friday, prosecutors charged the ship's captain, a Chinese national, with damaging critical infrastructure near Taiwan's southwestern coast
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According to Reuters, this is the first time Taiwan has brought criminal charges
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in a case involving undersea cable damage. Authorities say the captain of the Hongtai 58
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a vessel crewed by Chinese nationals and registered in Togo, dropped anchor in February near an undersea cable, causing damage
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Prosecutors in Taiwan identified the suspect only by his surname, Wang. Officials detained the ship after the cable malfunctioned
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and later filed charges against Wang, who denied wrongdoing and declined to name the ship's owner
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Prosecutors say they will not charge seven other Chinese nationals aboard the vessel
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and are planning to return them to China. The case comes as Taiwan faces a surge in cable disruptions and renewed military pressure
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from Beijing. Taiwan Digital Ministry says the island has reported five incidents of undersea cable damage so far this year up from three in both 2023 and 2024 Officials suspect China ships many sailing under foreign flags may be responsible
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Officials say Taiwan's Coast Guard has increased surveillance and maintains a blacklist of nearly 100 suspect ships operating near its waters
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In January, authorities say another China-linked vessel likely damaged a cable off the island's northern coast
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Taiwan's navy and digital ministry stepped up efforts to protect undersea cables
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which handled most of the island's internet and global data. China, which claims Taiwan as its territory, accused Taipei of politicizing the issue
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Beijing's Taiwan Affairs Office has not commented on the latest case, but previously dismissed concerns as premature and unproven
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Taiwanese officials are drawing parallels between recent damage in their waters and incidents in the Baltic Sea, where NATO states previously investigated suspected sabotage
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linked to Russian activity. ysts described the disruptions as part of what Taiwan sees as
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gray zone tactics, coercive measures that fall short of armed conflict. For more unbiased updates, download the Straight Arrow News app or go to san.com
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