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China pushes to preserve deep-sea interests with national security legislation
- Amid greater competition for resources and equipment, military powers are increasing deployment in deep-sea areas, says defence institute
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China says it will press ahead with legislation to protect its interests in deep-sea areas, a new arena of competition in its rivalry with the United States.
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In a commentary in Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily on Thursday, Public Security Minister Wang Xiaohong said Beijing would “proactively push forward national security legislation in crucial areas such as space, deep-sea and data security”.
Wang’s comments reflect the stress on national security to come out of last month’s third plenum, a twice-a-decade gathering of the party’s elite to determine the country’s economic direction.
The legislative process is part of China’s ongoing law-making efforts to reinforce its claims in disputed waters and normalise its activities in the high seas.
China introduced legislation in 2016 to cover deep-sea resource exploration, underpinning its survey and research efforts in what could be a new frontier for power growth and technological progress.
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But this time it is going one step further to protect what it sees as its “deep-sea interests and assets”.
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