TAIPEI: The chief of Taiwan's Coast Guard said on Monday that an average of six to seven Chinese vessels have been in waters around Kinmen island every day since a deadly boat incident last month.
A Chinese speedboat carrying four people capsized on February 14 near Kinmen while being pursued by the self-ruled island's coast guard, throwing all on board into the water.
Two of the crew died and two others were rescued and temporarily detained in Kinmen, a territory administered by Taipei but located just 5 kilometers (3 miles) from the southeastern Chinese city of Xiamen.
The incident has fueled tensions between China and Taiwan, which Beijing claims as part of its territory.
"Since the February 14 incident, they deliberately have six to seven vessels on average daily and as many as 11 vessels during the daytime," Taiwan Coast Guard chief Chou Mei-wu told a parliamentary committee, referring to China.
"They are not only coast guard boats, but also maritime surveillance ships and other vessels from (Chinese) authorities. Their intention is to surround Kinmen," he said.
The coast guard has "expelled" the vessels, he added without providing details.
A survivor of the boat crash has reportedly claimed the vessel was "rammed," while the Taiwanese coast guard has said it "lost its balance and capsized."
Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control, and in recent years has ramped up its rhetoric of "unification."
It has stepped up military pressure on Taiwan by deploying warplanes and naval vessels around the island nearly daily.
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