North Korea tests Beijing with hijack of another Chinese fishing boat
PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 24 September, 2014, 3:28am
UPDATED : Wednesday, 24 September, 2014, 3:28am
Reuters in Beijing
A boat from Dalian, with six crew on board, was seized by North Koreans on September 12. Photo: Screenshot via Sohu
North Korea detained a Chinese fishing boat and demanded a fine for its release, it was reported yesterday, apparently the first such move in more than a year, risking further strains on ties between Pyongyang and its only major ally.
A boat from Dalian, with six crew on board, was seized by North Koreans on September 12 while fishing in the Yellow Sea between China and the Korean peninsula, the government-run Beijing News reported.
The owner of the boat told the newspaper that he received a phone call, apparently from the North Korean coastguard, two days later and was told that his boat and crew had been detained for fishing in North Korean waters.
Photo: The Beijing News
The North Koreans demanded a fine of 250,000 yuan (HK$315, 000) for releasing the boat and its crew, but on September 17 the six crew returned to their fishing village with wounds on their bodies from being beaten, the newspaper said. It was reported that their wallets and belts had been stolen.
"The crew insist that their boat did not enter North Korean waters, not to mention crossing the line for fishing," Zhang Xikai, the fishing boat owner, was quoted as saying.
"They were conducting normal operations within Chinese waters when they were hijacked by North Korean personnel with guns and dragged into North Korean waters by force."
In Beijing, the foreign ministry confirmed it was aware of the boat's seizure and the Chinese embassy in Pyongyang made representations to the North Korean government, the newspaper said.
A spokeswoman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said yesterday she had not yet seen the report and would make checks.
North Korea in May detained a Chinese vessel with 16 crew demanding 600,000 yuan, but eventually released them without payment after Beijing intervened.
In 2012, three Chinese fishing boats were seized by North Koreans who asked for 1.2 million yuan.
They were freed later but it was unclear whether any payment had been made.
Beijing is a major supplier of food aid and oil to Pyongyang.
However, tension has mounted between the two countries, with North Korea increasingly isolated by UN sanctions over its nuclear ambitions and rocket launches.