‘I Got a Rock’

November 14, 2012

(Photo: Wikipedia)
(Photo: Wikipedia)

While Charlie Brown of ‘Peanuts’ comic strip fame lamented receiving rocks in lieu of Halloween candy, political rivals Japan and China are celebrating ‘rocks’, in fact naming them and filing claims to them in and around the East China Sea in an attempt to bolster and expand their country’s maritime claims.

 

According to a report in the Wednesday, November 14 edition of the Wall Street Journal, marking territory in and around the disputed waters – the Senkaku Islands being a small strip of uninhabited islands Northeast of Taiwan – has become a source of rising political tension as coast guard and surveillance boats jockey for position. In the case of the Senkaku chain, which is controlled by Japan but simultaneously claimed by Taiwa and China, the role of the respective country’s hydrographers become ever more important, relying on the latest technologies to accurately identify and claim parcels.

The claims are instrumental for matters of security and commerce, as territorial waters stretch 12 miles from a country’s land, with the land is continent or island. In the case of Japan’s ‘no island left behind’ campaign which dates back to 2007 according to the WSJ report, the very definition of an island is being stretched to the max, sometimes including only the tops of rocks, as long as it stays above the water line at high tide.

(Source: Wall Street Journal, Wikipedia, Staff)

 

 

 

Logistics News

CMA CGM’s Shipping Engine Holds Course in a Volatile Q3

CMA CGM’s Shipping Engine Holds Course in a Volatile Q3

Mitsubishi Shipbuilding Delivers Vessel KEYAKI

Mitsubishi Shipbuilding Delivers Vessel KEYAKI

Online Training Helps Maritime Professionals Recognize Signs of Human Trafficking

Online Training Helps Maritime Professionals Recognize Signs of Human Trafficking

Wilson Sons Earns 2025 Diamond Sustainability Seal from Brazilian Ministry of Ports and Airports

Wilson Sons Earns 2025 Diamond Sustainability Seal from Brazilian Ministry of Ports and Airports

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Sources say that Italy's Snam is set to cancel German gas deal due to Berlin's concerns over China
Iran confirms the seizure of a tanker carrying petrochemical cargo on the Gulf
US drops Biden plan to require passenger compensation for delayed flights