Taiwanese smugglers controlled vessel that damaged subsea cables, says China after probe

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This handout photo taken and released on Feb 25 by the Taiwan Coast Guard shows the detained Togolese-registered ship "Hongtai" in Penghu. Taiwan detained the Chinese-crewed cargo ship after a subsea telecoms cable was severed off the island, the coast guard said.

The seized Togolese-registered, Chinese-manned ship Hongtai in Penghu, Taiwan.

PHOTO: AFP

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The Chinese authorities on Dec 24 said two Taiwanese men led a smuggling operation involving a Chinese-crewed vessel that damaged subsea cables earlier in 2025. 

In June, a Taiwanese court sentenced the Chinese captain of a Togo-registered ship, the Hong Tai 58, to three years in jail after finding him guilty of intentionally damaging undersea cables off Taiwan in February, in a case that alarmed officials in Taipei. 

On Dec 24, the public security bureau in Weihai, in China’s eastern Shandong province, said its investigations into the incident showed that two Taiwanese men were behind a multi-vessel operation that was illegally transporting frozen goods into China. The authorities’ findings came after interviewing seven Chinese crew members on the Hong Tai 58.

China previously accused Taiwan of “manipulating” possible Chinese involvement in the case, saying it was making claims before the facts were clear.

Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council said the Chinese Communist Party does not have jurisdiction over Taiwan and urged the Chinese authorities to provide concrete evidence if they had it.

“In the absence of concrete evidence, publicly announcing names and offering rewards is not a civilized practice,” it said in a statement.

“It is merely another instance of cross-border repression and political manipulation.”

The Weihai public security bureau issued a bounty of up to 250,000 yuan (S$45,650) for information or assistance regarding the Taiwanese suspects with the surnames Chien and Chen, adding that they have been on a Chinese customs office wanted list since 2014.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office accused Taiwan’s Democratic Progressive Party of provoking confrontation, saying Taipei had “ignored the facts of the case” and “maliciously hyped up” the situation.

Taipei is “sheltering and condoning smuggling crimes, using the opportunity to carry out political manipulation and undermine cross-strait relations,” Mr Peng Qingen, a spokesman for the office, said at a weekly news briefing.

Beijing views Taiwan as its own territory. Taipei rejects that, saying only the island's people can decide their future. REUTERS

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