China
Calls for North Korea to Release Fishing Crew
New
York Times
2013/05/21
HONG KONG — China on
Monday repeated its call for North Korea to free a Chinese fishing boat and
crew seized earlier this month, and the boat’s owner voiced concern about the
safety of the detained fishermen, in the latest episode to lay bare recent
discord between the two governments. The Chinese Foreign Ministry revealed
on Sunday that the vessel’s owner, Yu Xuejun, had called the Chinese Embassy in
Pyongyang on May 10 to seek help after North Korea captured the fishing boat,
which operates from Dalian, a northeastern Chinese port city.
The ministry said it urged North Korea
to release the boat and crew as soon as possible, and on Monday a ministry
spokesman, Hong Lei, demanded that the North ensure that the crew members were
kept safe.
“China is in close communication with
North Korea over the Chinese fishing vessel held by the North,” Mr. Hong said.
“China has made representations to North Korea through the relevant channels,
demanding that it properly deal with the matter as quickly as possible and
effectively safeguard the legitimate rights of the Chinese fisherman, as well
as the safety of their lives and property.”
The ministry did not explain why it had waited
so long to reveal the seizure, which has come at a time of brittle tensions
with North Korea, an isolated country that depends on Beijing for diplomatic
and economic support.
China has long supported North Korea,
despite disagreement over the North’s nuclear activities, and many Chinese
experts see the North as a strategic shield against potential regional
domination by the United States and its allies, South Korea and Japan. But in
recent months, signs of irritation have surfaced in the two countries’
relations.
The announcement about the captured boat
promptly drew an outcry from Chinese media and citizens online, some of whom
have already expressed increasing impatience with North Korea over its nuclear
weapons ambitions and threats to the region. Since Saturday, the North has
launched several short-range projectiles into waters off its east coast.
The Chinese media reports said that the
boat was seized May 5, with 16 men aboard, and that the North Korean
authorities demanded payment of 600,000 renminbi, or about $98,000, to release
them and the vessel, apparently on the grounds that it was fishing in waters
claimed by North Korea. The deadline for payment was Sunday, the Beijing Times
newspaper said.
The owner of the boat, Mr. Yu, drew
public attention to its capture through messages on Tencent Weibo, a Chinese
microblog service. And on Monday he issued a message saying that he feared his
crew had been beaten.
“The captain of the seized boat
communicated using a satellite phone, and when I asked questions, it was clear
that he didn’t dare speak,” Mr. Yu wrote. “We’re afraid that the crew have been
beaten.”
Earlier this month, the state-controlled
Bank of China said that it had ceased dealing with the North Korean Foreign
Trade Bank, in what appeared to be a move supported by the Chinese government
to show impatience with the North. Since then, other Chinese banks have taken
similar steps.
In May of last year, Beijing disclosed
that three Chinese vessels had been seized by North Korea, which demanded payment
of a fine before it released them and the crew. They were freed several days
after Beijing made the incident public.
Summary
This news was published in 2013/05/20
which means yesterday, one of Chinese fisherman was fishing around China’s
territory. However, fisherman was fishing pretty far away from China, so off
course it is hard to go back. During he was fishing, the wind went to south to
north. Boat went to north and went until North Korea’s territory. North Korea
caught him and Yu Xuejun said to them to give back
the fisherman.
Vocabulary
-
Fisherman : a person who catches fishes
which is doing for a job or a sport
-
Territory : land that is controlled by
that country or ruler
-
Detain: to somebody in official place,
for example police station.
-
Ministry: a government that has
responsible of that area.
-
Diplomatic: connected with managing
relations between countries.
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