North Korea's relationship with China in jeopardy as row over fishing boat hijack rumbles on
China says it is urging North Korea to release a Chinese fishing boat whose owner publicised the plight of its 16 crew in an online account saying they were seized by gun-wielding North Koreans earlier this month and held for ransom.
North Korea can ill-afford to lose good relationship with China Photo: AP Photo/Jon Chol Jin
AP 4:30AM BST 20 May 2013
Yu Xuejun, who wasn't aboard the boat, wrote over the weekend that North Koreans seized his boat on May 5, in what he claims were Chinese waters, and that they demanded a 600,000 yuan ransom.
Yu, posting on a verified Weibo account, the Chinese equivalent to Twitter, said he was asking for help from his followers and China's Foreign Ministry.
The official Xinhua News Agency, in its first report of the incident late Sunday, said diplomats in the North Korean capital had received a request for help from Yu as early as May 10, and that they had demanded at the time that North Korea release the boat.
The official Xinhua News Agency, citing Chinese Embassy official Jiang Yaxian, said the embassy had contacted the North Korean Foreign Ministry's Bureau of Consular Affairs, "asking (North Korea) to release the boat and the fishermen as soon as possible." Jiang said the embassy would "continue efforts to ensure that the issue will be properly addressed at an early date."
The respected Southern Metropolis Daily reported earlier Sunday that Yu received a call from North Korea saying his boat had entered North Korean waters – although he maintains it was in Chinese waters. It quoted an unnamed official from Liaoning province's maritime police as confirming the case had been reported to them on May 6 and that a team was handling it.
Yu said the North Korean side had asked for the ransom to be paid by noon Sunday to a company in Dandong, a city in northeastern China on the North Korean border, or they would confiscate the boat and repatriate the crew. The newspaper didn't mention whether Yu had paid any money.
In May last year, a North Korean boat hijacked three Chinese boats with 29 fishermen on board. State media said then that the unidentified captors demanded £120,000 for the fishermen's release. They were freed within two weeks.
China is North Korea's economic lifeline, providing nearly all of its fuel and most of its trade. North Korea's economic dependence on China is rising, following a standoff with South Korea that effectively shut an industrial park that was an important source of hard currency.