Taiwan Coast Guard ‘Expels’ Chinese Ships From Restricted Waters

TAIPEI, June 7 (Reuters) – Taiwan’s coast guard said on ⁠Sunday ⁠that its ships had “expelled” four Chinese ⁠government ships that entered restricted waters off the island’s south after ​the two sides broadcast testy warnings to each other, in an escalation of tensions.

China, which views democratically ‌governed Taiwan as its own territory, ‌has been angered by Japan and the Philippines saying last month they would begin formal ⁠talks on ⁠delimiting their maritime boundary, viewing that as involving waters off Taiwan.

Late on ​Saturday, Chinese state media said that ships had been sent to carry out a “special maritime traffic law-enforcement operation” in the waters east of Taiwan in response to the Japanese and Philippine announcement.

Taiwan’s coast guard said ​that four Chinese ships, including three coast guard vessels, had sailed on Sunday afternoon into ⁠Taiwan’s ⁠restricted waters 30 nautical miles ⁠southwest of ​the island’s southern tip.

Taiwan sent seven coast guard vessels to warn away the Chinese ships, ​and late afternoon Sunday all ⁠four Chinese government vessels were “expelled” from the restricted waters, it said in a statement.

Taiwan’s coast guard published a recording of the Chinese warning to the Taiwanese ships in which an unidentified officer says: “These are waters under Chinese jurisdiction. Our maritime law-enforcement formation is carrying out a special traffic ⁠law-enforcement mission in the waters of the Taiwan Strait. Do not interfere with our ⁠official duties.”

A Taiwanese coast guard officer replies that China does not enjoy any “sovereign rights” in the waters east of Taiwan.

“If conflict occurs, your side will face sanctions from the world. Only maritime stability can ensure your country’s development,” the Taiwanese officer added.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office did not answer calls seeking comment outside of office hours.

Taiwan has reported a rise in Chinese coast guard activity over the past two weeks, including stand-offs around the Taiwan-controlled Pratas Islands at the top end of the South China ⁠Sea.

China’s military already operates around Taiwan on an almost daily basis.

“The PRC is nothing but a big fat bully,” Taiwan National Security Council Secretary-General Joseph Wu wrote on his X account on Sunday, referring to the People’s Republic of China.

China has never ​renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control. Taiwan’s ​government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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