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South China Sea
ChinaDiplomacy

China urges Indonesia to release crew after stand-off in South China Sea over ‘illegal fishing’

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Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi told reporters her government has lodged a formal protest to China over the confrontation in its waters. Photo: EPA
Agence France-Presse

A Chinese envoy called on Indonesia to release eight crew members of a Chinese fishing boat detained during a maritime confrontation after he was summoned by furious Indonesian ministers.

Jakarta says Indonesian vessels were on Saturday trying to detain a Chinese fishing boat operating illegally near Indonesia’s Natuna Islands in the South China Sea when they were prevented from doing so by Chinese coastguard vessels.

However Sun Weide, China’s acting charge d’affaires in Jakarta, insisted that the incident occurred in “traditional Chinese fishing grounds”.

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The two nations normally enjoy good relations and the flare-up in tensions is rare.

Indonesia to summon Chinese envoy after boat confrontation in South China Sea

Indonesia does not have overlapping territorial claims with China in the South China Sea, unlike other Asian nations, but it objects to China’s “nine-dash line” defining its claims since it overlaps Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone around the Natunas.

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