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Taiwan says Chinese coast guard, research ships near key S. China Sea islands

By Thomson Reuters Jun 6, 2026 | 2:08 AM

TAIPEI, June 6 (Reuters) – Taiwan said on Saturday that a Chinese coast guard ship and a survey ship had carried out the first coordinated operation to “provoke” Taiwan, in waters around strategically ​located islands in the South China Sea.

The Taiwan-controlled Pratas Islands, ‌a national park toward the northern end of the South China Sea and lightly defended by the coast guard, have emerged as a new pressure point in China’s ongoing military and quasi-military operations around Taiwan in an effort to assert Beijing’s sovereignty ‌claims.

The ​islands between southern Taiwan and Hong Kong are ⁠seen by some security experts ⁠as vulnerable to Chinese attack due to their distance – more than 400 km (250 miles) – from Taiwan island.

Taiwan’s coast guard said in a statement that along with a Chinese coast guard ship that had approached ​the Pratas on Friday, a Chinese oceanographic survey vessel approached the islands on Saturday.

“This is the first observed instance of Chinese coast guard ⁠and survey vessels acting in coordination ⁠to provoke Taiwan,” it said.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office did not ​immediately respond to a request for comment. China considers Taiwan and the ​Pratas, an atoll with no civilian population, as its territory. ‌Taiwan’s government rejects Beijing’s claims, saying only the island’s people can decide their future.

“These acts are highly provocative. The PRC is a sick bully, causing trouble across the region,” Taiwan National Security Council Secretary-General Joseph Wu wrote ⁠on his X account, and included a map showing the track of the two ships.

PRC refers to the People’s Republic of China.

The Chinese coast guard ⁠vessel broadcast that it ‌was conducting law enforcement operations and that “Taiwan’s future lies ⁠in national reunification”, said Taiwan’s coast guard, which dispatched ​its ‌own vessels in response.

It said the Taiwan ship broadcast ​back: “Stop undermining ⁠peace. You should return and pursue democracy – that is the proper way to serve your country.”

China is trying to create a “false illusion” of jurisdiction over the area, the coast guard said. “Taiwan’s maritime sovereignty brooks no provocation.”

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Ryan Woo in Beijing; Editing by William Mallard ​and Kim Coghill)