Site icon

New Taiwan-Japan Ferry Service Debuts on Ship That Has War Evacuation Role

By Yi-Chin Lee and Ann Wang

KEELUNG, Taiwan, May ⁠28 (Reuters) – ⁠A new ferry service to ⁠serve booming tourism between Taiwan and Japan began on Thursday on a ​ship that could be pressed into service to evacuate people on southern Japanese islands in the ‌event of a war in the ‌region.

The Yaima Maru is one of the ships that Japan’s government this year put on ⁠a list ⁠of vessels to be used to evacuate island residents to mainland ​Japan in case of a crisis.

China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has ramped up its military pressure against Taipei over the past five years, including holding war games covering areas ​that have been close to Japanese waters.

For now, the ship will be linking Taiwan’s northern ⁠port ⁠city of Keelung with Japan’s ⁠Ishigaki, which ​lies to the east of Taiwan at the bottom end of the Ryukyu islands, shuttling ​tourists back and forth once ⁠a week on an overnight journey.

“This regular route is not merely transportation infrastructure,” Ishigaki Mayor Yoshitaka Nakayama said at Keelung port. “It serves as a new bridge that supports tourism, logistics, economic activity, cultural exchange, and education.”

The U.S. has a major military base in Okinawa in the Ryukyu ⁠islands and Japan has been strengthening its defences in the area, including on ⁠Yonaguni, the Japanese island which sits closest to Taiwan.

Tatsuya Ohama, president of Shosen Yaima which runs the ferry service, declined to directly answer questions about regional tensions.

“This is fundamentally a matter between countries. As a private ferry operator, our first step is to get the service up and running,” he told reporters.

Japan ruled Taiwan as a colony from 1895 to 1945 and the two have very close economic and trade relations despite a lack of formal diplomatic ties.

China has been angered by ⁠stepped-up support from Tokyo for Taipei.

In November, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said a hypothetical Chinese attack on Taiwan could trigger a military response from Tokyo. That infuriated Beijing and triggered a deterioration in ties.

Taiwan’s government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims.

(Reporting by Yi-Chin ​Lee and Ann Wang; Additional reporting by Kantaro Komiya in Tokyo; Writing ​by Ben Blanchard; Editing by John Mair)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Photos You Should See – April 2026

Exit mobile version