China seizes 60,000 maps over ‘mislabelled’ Taiwan

China Customs Two customs officers wearing dark blue uniform squatting on the ground and looking at a map. One of them is pointing at an area near China on the mapChina Customs

Customs officers recently seized a batch of maps bound for export, which they described as “problematic”

Chinese customs officers in eastern Shandong province have seized 60,000 maps that “mislabelled” the self-governed island of Taiwan, which Beijing claims as part of its territory.

The maps, authorities said, also “omitted important islands” in the South China Sea, where Beijing’s claims overlap with those of its neighbours, including the Philippines and Vietnam.

The “problematic” maps, meant for export, cannot be sold because they “endanger national unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity” of China, authorities said.

Maps are a sensitive topic for China and its rivals for reefs, islands and outcrops in the South China Sea.

China Customs said that the maps also did not contain the nine-dash line, which demarcates Beijing’s claim over nearly the entire South China Sea.

The line comprises nine dashes which extends hundreds of miles south and east from its most southerly province of Hainan.

The seized maps also did not mark the maritime boundary between China and Japan, authorities said.

Authorities said the maps mislabelled “Taiwan province”, without specifying what exactly the mislabelling was.

China sees self-ruled Taiwan its territory and has not ruled out the use of force to take the island. But Taiwan sees itself as distinct from the Chinese mainland, with its own constitution and democratically-elected leaders.

Tensions in the South China Sea flare up occassionally – most recently over the weekend, when ships from China and the Philippines figured in another encounter.

Manila accused a Chinese ship of deliberately ramming and firing its water cannon at a Philippine government vessel.

But Beijing said the incident happened after the Philippine vessel ignored repeated warnings and “dangerously approached” the Chinese ship.

Map of the South China Sea showing territorial claims and disputed areas. It includes China's claim line in red dashes, the UNCLOS 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zones in blue dashes, and disputed islands marked with yellow dots. Key locations labelled include the Paracels, Scarborough Shoal, and Spratlys. Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Taiwan and China are also labelled. Source: UNCLOS and CIA.

The Philippines and Vietnam are also particularly sensitive to depictions of the South China Sea in maps.

The Barbie movie from 2023 was banned in Vietnam and censored in the Philippines for showing a South China Sea map with the nine dash line.

The statement from China Customs did not say where the seized maps were intended to be sold. China supplies much of the world’s goods, from Christmas lights to stationery.

The confiscation of “problematic maps” by Chinese customs officers is not uncommon – though the number of the maps seized in Shandong easily eclipses past seizures. Goods that fail inspection at the customs are destroyed.

In March, customs officers at an airport in Qingdao seized a batch of 143 nautical charts that contained “obvious errors” in the national borders.

In August, customs officers in Hebei province seized two “problematic maps” that, among other things, contained a “misdrawing” of the Tibetan border.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

A PLA aerobatic team fires flares during a military air show in Tianjin on Thursday. Photo: EPA

‘Stronger wings’: China’s Z-20T assault helicopter thrills in rare military show demo

In a rare public display, China has showcased the advanced capabilities of the cutting-edge Z-20T assault helicopter at a military exhibition in Tianjin this week, demonstrating precision manoeuvres by the all-weather aircraft. The helicopters performed a hover salute, a backward ascent and a vertical climb and also fired jamming flares at the 7th China Helicopter

Microsoft sets 2026 'China deadline' for suppliers, instructs: Help prepare ...

Microsoft sets 2026 ‘China deadline’ for suppliers, instructs: Help prepare …

Amid escalating US-China trade tensions, Microsoft is reportedly targeting a major overhaul of its manufacturing operations, aiming to produce the bulk of its upcoming hardware outside China by as soon as 2026. According to a report in Nikkei Asia, quoting sources, Microsoft aims to produce the majority of its new products outside of China as

Treasury Sec. Bessent to speak with Chinese Vice Premier today to discuss ongoing trade negotiations

Trump Treasury Sec. Bessent to speak with Chinese trade counterpart

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will speak by phone on Friday with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng to discuss the ongoing trade negotiations between the United States and China, a senior Trump administration official told CNBC’s Eamon Javers. Additional details about the call, including the specific time it would take place or the next steps to

ET logo

China probes top military general, punishes 9 senior officers in latest corruption crackdown

China’s second-ranked general was placed under investigation for corruption, while nine senior military officers were punished for violation of discipline and work-related crimes in the latest crackdown, the defence ministry said on Friday in a rare public disclosure of action against top brass of the military. He Weidong, vice-chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC)

Brett LoGiurato

Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures recover as Trump soothes China worries amid bank jitters

US stocks came back from significant losses Friday as President Trump eased worries of further trade escalation with China, while regional bank stocks also recovered amid investor jitters over bad loans and US credit quality. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM=F) gained roughly 0.2%, while those on the S&P 500 (ES=F) hovered around the flatline.

A chart showing the countries with the highest share of global manufacturing output.

Microsoft to move most of hardware manufacturing outside of China

Microsoft reportedly wants to pivot the majority of its hardware manufacturing outside of China next year, a sign of the growing fracture between the Western and Chinese technology sectors. It is not alone among American Big Tech firms: Nikkei also said AWS is moving server production outside of China, while Google is trying to grow

MPs demand chief prosecutor explain China spy case collapse

MPs demand chief prosecutor explain China spy case collapse

Paul SeddonPolitical reporter PA Media Stephen Parkinson has been criticial of Sir Keir Starmer’s time as head of the CPS The director of public prosecutions is facing mounting pressure to further explain the collapse of a case against two men accused of spying for China. MPs are demanding Stephen Parkinson give a “fuller explanation” of