Welcome to Vape.to ! Log in or Sign up to interact with the Vape.to community.

Taiwan asks Google to blur images showing new South China Sea facilities

Discussion in 'Non Vape Related News' started by news, Sep 23, 2016.

  1. news

    news Active Member

    Messages:
    1,668
    Likes Received:
    2
    TAIPEI Taiwan's defense ministry said on Wednesday it is asking Google to blur satellite images showing what experts say appear to be new military installations on Itu Aba, Taipei's sole holding in the disputed South China Sea.


    The revelation of new military-related construction could raise tensions in the contested waterway, where China's building of airstrips and other facilities has worried other claimants and the United States.


    DON'T MISS:


    Tensions flare up in North Carolina after police kill black man


    SEC charges hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman with insider trading


    Technology: Hello Allo


    The images seen on Google Earth show four three-pronged structures sitting in a semi-circle just off the northwestern shoreline of Itu Aba, across from an upgraded airstrip and recently constructed port that can dock 3,000-ton frigates.


    "Under the pre-condition of protecting military secrets and security, we have requested Google blur images of important military facilities," Taiwan Defense Ministry spokesman Chen Chung-chi said on Wednesday, after local media published the images on Itu Aba.


    The United States has urged against the militarization of the South China Sea, following the rapid land reclamation by China on several disputed reefs through dredging, and building air fields and port facilities.


    Taiwan's defense ministry and coast guard, which directly oversees Itu Aba, said details about the structures are confidential and have not commented on their nature.


    Google, a unit of Alphabet Inc, did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the request.


    Defense experts in Taiwan said that based on the imagery of the structures and their semi-circular layout, the structures were likely related to defense and could be part of an artillery foundation.


    "I think definitely it will be for military purposes, but I cannot tell if it is for defending, attacking or monitoring," said Dustin Wang, a scholar and a former government advisor who has regularly visited Itu Aba.


    Wang said given the structures' location which faces the main seaborne traffic, they may relate to surveillance.


    China, Taiwan, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei claim parts or all of the South China Sea, through which trillions of dollars in trade passes.


    In July, an international court ruled against China in a case brought by the Philippines that rejected China's claim to a vast swathes of the disputed maritime area. Both China and Taiwan, which China views as a renegade province, vehemently rejected the court ruling.


    (Reporting by J.R. Wu; Editing by Lincoln Feast)


    [​IMG]

    An aerial photo taken though a glass window of a Taiwanese military plane shows the view of Itu Aba, which the Taiwanese call Taiping, at the South China Sea, March 2016. REUTERS/Ministry of Foreign Affairs

    Next In World News


    [​IMG]

    South Korea says time to reconsider North Korea's U.N. membership


    UNITED NATIONS South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se accused North Korea on Thursday of "totally ridiculing" the authority of the United Nations through its nuclear and missile tests and said it was time to reconsider whether it was qualified for U.N. membership.


    [​IMG]

    Palestinians' Abbas seeks British apology for 1917 Jewish homeland declaration


    UNITED NATIONS Britain should apologize for its 1917 declaration endorsing the founding of a Jewish homeland in Palestine and should recognize Palestine as a state, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said on Thursday.


    [​IMG]

    Canada, China agree to tighten trade ties, mull extradition pact


    OTTAWA Canada and China on Thursday settled a trade dispute and said they would start exploratory talks on a free trade pact, but gave few details about a possible extradition treaty for Chinese fugitives which has triggered criticism in Canada.

    From Around the Web Promoted by Taboola
    [​IMG]
     
Loading...

Share This Page