SEOUL – South Korea and the United Nations Command, which oversees the Korean War armistice, said on Friday they had begun a joint operation to keep Chinese fishing vessels from operating illegally off the west coast.
The move comes after South Korean fishermen, frustrated with incursions by Chinese fishing boats in defiance of coastguard warnings, used rope to impound two Chinese trawlers this month and handed them over to authorities.
South Korea’s navy and coast guard joined with the UN Command to patrol the approximately 60 kilometer stretch of waters in the Han River estuary that runs between the coasts of the rival Koreas, a Defense Ministry official told Reuters.
“Our navy, coastguard, and UN Command set up a military police to enter into an operation to expel Chinese fishing vessels,” said the official.
North Korea had been notified of the team’s operation as a safety precaution, an official at the Joint Chiefs of Staff said separately.
North and South Korea are technically still at war because their 1950-53 conflict ended in the armistice, not a peace treaty.
There were more than 10 Chinese boats fishing in the estuary on Friday but they fled to areas near North Korea’s shore after the South Korean-UN operation began, the Joint Chiefs of Staff official said.
China’s Foreign Ministry said Beijing paid close attention to the education of fishermen and always urged them to respect international agreements.
“China is willing to strengthen communication and cooperation in the fishing industry with related countries in order to uphold the normal order of the fishing industry,” it said in a statement emailed to Reuters.
“China hopes that the South Korean side will execute the law in a civilized and rational way, and thoroughly protect the legal rights of Chinese fishermen, avoiding incidents that endanger personal safety.”
The waters are near the Northern Limit Line, the maritime border disputed by the North which has been the scene of deadly naval clashes between the rival Koreas and violent confrontation between South Korea’s coastguard and Chinese fishing vessels. (Reuters)