- Starbucks profits fall but points to progress in turnaround
- Trump federal spending freeze sparks confusion, fury
- DeepSeek shock shows Europe not out of AI race: experts
- European watchdog takes aim at online gambling, gaming among youths
- US stocks, Nvidia shares steady after Chinese AI shock
- Hopes for turnaround lift Boeing shares despite huge losses
- UK's first AI classroom without teachers sparks debate
- France savours competitive cooking win as restoring lost prestige
- Police arrest two after protest at Sigourney Weaver London play
- Spain jobless rate falls to lowest level since 2008 crisis
- DeepSeek, Chinese AI startup roiling US tech giants
- Climate activists fire confetti cannon at Sigourney Weaver London play
- DeepSeek breakthrough raises AI energy questions
- German, Danish leaders meet after Trump Greenland warnings
- Breakout Chinese AI 'programmed' to toe the party line
- Games music composer with ambition to define an artform
- Border-free EU travel brings 'thrilled' ethnic Hungarians closer
- Trump warns of 'wake-up call' as low-cost Chinese AI jolts sector
- How Donald Trump weaponized tariffs
- EU, Britain to face off in post-Brexit fishing battle case
- Do or DEI: Trump's assault on diversity divides America
- Hollywood cameo for Mexico's scrap merchant anthem
- 'Tell the world': Holocaust survivors entrust memories to AI
- Chiuri delves into past for what could be last Dior fashion show
- Chinese property giant Vanke warns of huge loss, CEO resigns
- Taiwan identifies 52 'suspicious' Chinese ships for close monitoring
- Chinese lion dance troupe shrugs off patriarchal past
- Asian stocks drop as tariff fears return, new AI programme emerges
- Troubled European carmakers to talk fines and EVs with EU
- Japan's Fuji TV faces heat over sex allegations
- Japan's Osaka bans street smoking ahead of Expo 2025
- ECB to cut rates again, with a nervous eye on Trump
- Universal, Spotify ink multi-year deal
- Undersea cable between Sweden and Latvia damaged, both countries say
- 'Neo-Dandies' and Trump fears at Paris Men's Fashion Week
- Belarusians near Ukraine border long for end to war
- US Fed prepares to pause in first rate decision since Trump's inauguration
- Survivors centre stage for 80th anniversary of Auschwitz liberation
- Rubbish roads: Nepal explores paving with plastic
- US stocks retreat while yen gains on Bank of Japan rate hike
- Serbians strike in protest over fatal roof collapse
- Meta plans to invest $60 bn or more in AI this year
- Power cuts and transport chaos as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland and UK
- Croatians boycott shopping to protest high prices
- US home sales in 2024 weakest in nearly 30 years
- 'White wall' of ice drifts toward remote penguin haven
- Stocks diverge as investors weigh earnings, Trump policies
- Beached whales: Airbus grounds its massive Beluga cargo flights
- IMF chief tells Europe to take page out of US book
- Bob Dylan a contrast to 'narcissistic' modern stars, says biopic director
Taiwan identifies 52 'suspicious' Chinese ships for close monitoring
Taiwan has identified 52 "suspicious" Chinese-owned ships flying flags of convenience that require close monitoring if detected near the island, the coast guard said Monday, as Taipei seeks to protect its subsea telecoms cables.
The stricter regime comes after a Cameroon-flagged vessel was briefly detained by Taiwan's coast guard earlier this month on suspicion of damaging an international cable northeast of the island.
The vessel was owned by a Hong Kong-registered company with a Chinese address given for its only listed director, the coast guard said previously.
Taiwan fears China could sever its communication links as part of an attempt to seize the island or blockade it.
Flags of convenience allow shipping companies to register their vessels in countries to which they have no link -- for a fee and freedom from oversight.
The coast guard said 52 "suspicious" Chinese-owned ships flying flags of convenience from Mongolia, Cameroon, Tanzania, Togo, and Sierra Leone had been highlighted for close monitoring based on port records and data from Tokyo MOU, a regional multilateral body for port state control.
Of the 52 vessels, 15 were rated a "threat" for various reasons -- including the amount of time they spent loitering or sailing slowly near Taiwan's subsea cables in 2024.
Five, considered to pose the greatest threat, had been active in Taiwan's northern, western and southern waters, and had stayed "within Taiwan's territorial waters for more than 15 days", the coast guard said in a statement.
Taiwanese authorities will monitor for "anomalies" in a ship's AIS (automatic identification system) operation and "fake or misuse of vessel names".
Vessels suspected of "loitering, slow navigation, or anchoring" near subsea cables will be warned by radio to leave the area, the coast guard said.
"If the vessel does not comply, coast guard ships will be dispatched to collect evidence and drive the vessel away," it said.
"Boarding inspections will be conducted when necessary to safeguard Taiwan's maritime and international communications security."
China claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has threatened to use force to bring it under its control.
Taiwan has 14 international underwater cables and 10 domestic ones.
In February 2023, two telecoms lines serving Taiwan's outlying Matsu archipelago were cut, disrupting communications for weeks.
St.Ch.Baker--CPN