A Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) lawmaker yesterday presented his research involving a former US vice consul to Taiwan in the 1950s to show that the disputed Diaoyutai Islands (釣魚台) and its surrounding waters are traditional fishing grounds of Taiwanese fishermen.
Between April 17 and April 23, 1955, the Free China was anchored off the Diaoyutais along with a Taiwanese fishing boat and found that the islands had been used as a shelter by Taiwanese fishermen, KMT Legislator Chiu Wen-yen (邱文彥) said.
Chiu called the press conference to release his findings drawn from his research on the voyage of the Free China in 1955 and e-mail correspondence with Calvin Mehlert, then-US counsel to Taiwan, and Paul Chow (周傳鈞), two of the six crewmembers who made the trip from Taiwan to San Francisco that year.
Photo: CNA
The Free China, a wooden junk constructed in Mawei in China’s Fujian Province in 1890, was the first Taiwanese boat to successfully sail across the Pacific Ocean solely using its sails and was the only one of its kind.
With five young men and Mehlert on board, the Free China left Keelung Harbor on April 4, 1955, to take part in a sailing competition in the US. Although it was unable to make it to the race because it lacked modern equipment and encountered storms along the way, it beat all the odds to arrive in San Francisco after 114 days at sea.
The boat was transported back to Taiwan last month onboard a Yang Ming Marine Transport cargo ship from Oakland, California, and is undergoing restoration at the National Museum of Marine Science and Technology in Keelung.
Intrigued by the image of crewmember Benny Hsu (徐家政) sitting on a cliff on “No-Man Island” waving his hands in the feature-length film Free China Junk — which documented the journey and was directed by Robin Greenburg — Chiu, a marine scientist, said he was curious to know the location of the island.
Chiu said he presumed the “No-Man Island” was one of the Diaoyutai Islands after he found a photograph taken by Mehlert featuring a peculiar rock on the island that resembles other photographs of the Diaoyutais that he had seen.
Chiu said his presumption was confirmed after he checked the daily records of the Free China’s voyage, nautical charts for the voyage and descriptions about geographical characteristics of the island in other literature, adding that Mehlert and Chow corroborated his research.
In an e-mail reply to Chiu, Chow said he believed the “No-Man Island” was one of the Diaoyutai Islands and that when the Free China was anchored at the Diaoyutais, Mehlert made several trips ashore and found wreckage and skeletons.
Chow said “small-boat fishermen in Keelung, particularly harpooners, have been using it as a shelter for as long as we could remember in our history.”
Mehlert said in an e-mail reply to Chiu that: “To my mind, your and our photos are conclusive evidence that our wurendao [無人島, No-Man Island] is one of the Diaoyutais. There just aren’t any other small islands in that area.”
Chiu’s findings would help the government assert its claim to sovereignty over the Diaoyutais against Japan, said Wang Ching-hsiu (王靚琇), deputy director of the Department of Land Administration.
Beijing also claims sovereignty over the disputed islands.
In related news, several members of the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly yesterday conducted an inspection trip to waters off the Diaoyutais, prompting the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in Tokyo to send a letter to the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs to register its concerns over and protest against the move.
In Taipei, Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Steve Shia (夏季昌) reiterated that the Republic of China government has full sovereignty over the islands and opposes any infringement of the nation’s sovereign territory in the form of words or deeds.
Taiwan called on the Japanese government to “react cautiously” to acts performed by its politicians that were intended to infringe the sovereignty of the country and refrain from making moves to avoid any harmful impact on the relationship between Taiwan and Japan, Shia said.
The Taipei Department of Health yesterday said it has launched a probe into a restaurant at Far Eastern Sogo Xinyi A13 Department Store after a customer died of suspected food poisoning. A preliminary investigation on Sunday found missing employee health status reports and unsanitary kitchen utensils at Polam Kopitiam (寶林茶室) in the department store’s basement food court, the department said. No direct relationship between the food poisoning death and the restaurant was established, as no food from the day of the incident was available for testing and no other customers had reported health complaints, it said, adding that the investigation is ongoing. Later
REVENGE TRAVEL: A surge in ticket prices should ease this year, but inflation would likely keep tickets at a higher price than before the pandemic Scoot is to offer six additional flights between Singapore and Northeast Asia, with all routes transiting Taipei from April 1, as the budget airline continues to resume operations that were paused during the COVID-19 pandemic, a Scoot official said on Thursday. Vice president of sales Lee Yong Sin (李榮新) said at a gathering with reporters in Taipei that the number of flights from Singapore to Japan and South Korea with a stop in Taiwan would increase from 15 to 21 each week. That change means the number of the Singapore-Taiwan-Tokyo flights per week would increase from seven to 12, while Singapore-Taiwan-Seoul
BAD NEIGHBORS: China took fourth place among countries spreading disinformation, with Hong Kong being used as a hub to spread propaganda, a V-Dem study found Taiwan has been rated as the country most affected by disinformation for the 11th consecutive year in a study by the global research project Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem). The nation continues to be a target of disinformation originating from China, and Hong Kong is increasingly being used as a base from which to disseminate that disinformation, the report said. After Taiwan, Latvia and Palestine ranked second and third respectively, while Nicaragua, North Korea, Venezuela and China, in that order, were the countries that spread the most disinformation, the report said. Each country listed in the report was given a score,
POOR PREPARATION: Cultures can form on food that is out of refrigeration for too long and cooking does not reliably neutralize their toxins, an epidemiologist said Medical professionals yesterday said that suspected food poisoning deaths revolving around a restaurant at Far Eastern Department Store Xinyi A13 Store in Taipei could have been caused by one of several types of bacterium. Ho Mei-shang (何美鄉), an epidemiologist at Academia Sinica’s Institute of Biomedical Sciences, wrote on Facebook that the death of a 39-year-old customer of the restaurant suggests the toxin involved was either “highly potent or present in massive large quantities.” People who ate at the restaurant showed symptoms within hours of consuming the food, suggesting that the poisoning resulted from contamination by a toxin and not infection of the