A Taiwan Coast Guard handout photo shows mariners seizing the boat Ruan used  Handout / TAIWAN COAST GUARD/AFP/File
WORLD

Chinese ex-naval captain charged with illegally entering Taiwan

TDT

TAIPEI (AFP) — A former Chinese naval captain arrested for illegally entering Taiwan by boat was formally charged Wednesday, but prosecutors said “no military or national security involvement” was linked to his act.

The man, surnamed Ruan, was picked up by Taiwan’s coast guard in June after his vessel collided with other boats on the Tamsui River, which flows from the capital Taipei to the island’s northern coast.

Officials said he was one of 18 purported defectors from China — which claims Taiwan as part of its territory — seen over the past year or so.

They all claimed to admire Taiwan’s “democratic way of life,” authorities said, who also warned they could not rule out the possibility the incursions were a test of the island’s defenses by China.

Ruan, 60, identified by Taiwanese authorities as a former captain in the Chinese navy, reportedly told coast guard officers at the scene that he wanted to “defect.”

The Shilin District Prosecutors Office on Wednesday charged him with violating a law governing relations with China and also for entering Taiwan without permission.

“The defendant smuggled himself to Taiwan by boat due to personal reasons... no involvement of military or national security crimes was found,” it said in a statement.

China has in recent years ramped up military and political pressures on the island, while Beijing has severed all top-level communications since 2016.

Tensions have spiked under two consecutive Taipei administrations — first under former leader Tsai Ing-wen, and now under President Lai Ching-te — which have refused to acknowledge China’s claim on Taiwan.

Relations have been further marred since February following a string of fishing boat incidents — including one in July when a Taiwanese vessel carrying five people was seized by the Chinese coast guard for allegedly fishing illegally off the coast of China’s Fujian province.