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Indonesia navy says Chinese fishing is 'ruse' to stake claim by Staff Writers Jakarta, Indonesia (AFP) June 21, 2016 Indonesia's navy said Tuesday that poaching by Chinese trawlers in its waters was a "ruse" to stake Beijing's claim to fishing grounds, after the latest clash in the South China Sea. The confrontation Friday near Indonesia's Natuna Islands was the third such skirmish in the area this year between Chinese and Indonesian vessels, as tensions mount in the waterway over Beijing's growing assertiveness. Indonesian warships fired warning shots at a group of foreign vessels allegedly fishing illegally and detained a Chinese-flagged boat and seven crew. Beijing protested after the clash and said one fisherman was injured. Jakarta has said none of the detained crew were hurt. The commander of the Indonesian navy's western fleet said he suspected the incursions were "structured", indicating the Chinese government had "given its blessing". "China protested because it thinks this area is theirs," commander Achmad Taufiqoerrochman told reporters. "Actually the (fish) stealing is just a ruse to stake its claim," he said, referring to allegations that Chinese vessels regularly fish illegally in Indonesian waters near the Natunas. "They need a presence and their way to do it is with fishing boats." Unlike several of its Southeast Asian neighbours, the Indonesian government has long maintained it has no maritime disputes with China in the South China Sea. It has no overlapping claims with China to islets or reefs there. But Beijing's claim to fishing rights near the Natunas, some 3,000 kilometres (1,864 miles) from Chinese shores, appears to overlap with Indonesia's exclusive economic zone -- waters where a state has sole rights to exploit resources -- around the islands. China has said it recognises Indonesia's sovereignty over the Natuna Islands themselves. Following Friday's clash, China's foreign ministry noted that "China and Indonesia have overlapping claims for maritime rights and interests" in the area, a statement which analysts said was significant as it openly acknowledged the existence of a dispute. In the past, China has typically defended the actions of its vessels by saying they were operating in "traditional Chinese fishing grounds". Ian Storey, a South China Sea expert at Singapore's ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute, told AFP it was "a shift in the existing position of just calling it traditional fishing grounds. "It suggests that it doesn't recognise Indonesia's claim to that exclusive economic zone." Confrontations between Indonesian and Chinese vessels around the Natunas have escalated since Jakarta launched a crackdown on illegal fishing in 2014. Indonesia plans to sink a group of impounded foreign fishing vessels next month.
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