South Korea seizes two Chinese boats over illegal fishing

South Korea's Coast Guard seized two Chinese fishing boats near Baengnyeong Island on Saturday for illegal fishing in its waters. One Chinese sailor died during the operation after suffering cardiac arrest.

The Coast Guard said Saturday that the two boats had crossed the Northern Limit Line, the de facto border, by roughly 3 kilometers around 8 p.m. Friday. The vessels were intercepted 14.8 kilometers northwest of Baengnyeong Island.

During the crackdown, a Chinese national in his 40s suffered cardiac arrest. He received CPR while being taken to a hospital but was later pronounced dead. Fellow crew members said the sailor had consumed a large amount of alcohol.

Authorities notified Chinese consular officials of the death. They plan to question the remaining crew members about the illegal fishing.

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Illustration of a fishing boat sinking off Busan following a collision with an LPG carrier.
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Fishing boat sinks off Busan, killing captain and leaving two missing

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A 79-ton fishing boat sank after colliding with a liquefied petroleum gas carrier off Busan on Thursday, leaving the South Korean captain dead and two Indonesian crew members missing.

Nag-anunsyo ang Philippine Coast Guard na magde-deploy ito ng mga sasakyang-dagat at mga eroplano upang hamunin at paalisin ang mga Chinese research vessels na gumagawa ng hindi batas na pananaliksik sa karagatan sa West Philippine Sea. Apat na Chinese vessels ang natukoy na umaandar sa Philippine waters nang walang pahintulot mula sa gobyerno. Ayon sa PCG, kinakailangan ang prior authorization para sa anumang foreign marine scientific research.

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Israeli forces intercepted the Kyriakos X boat carrying South Korean activist Kim Dong-hyeon on Monday evening as it headed toward the Gaza Strip. A civic group reported the seizure on Tuesday, stating that Kim and other activists are now presumed detained on an Israeli warship. The incident follows Kim's departure earlier this month despite a South Korean government travel ban on the territory.

The U.S. Coast Guard intercepted a vessel carrying 25 migrants from China about a mile south of Key Biscayne, Florida, on June 10, after the boat failed to comply with orders to stop, according to the Department of Homeland Security. DHS said the Coast Guard fired warning shots and then a disabling shot that halted the vessel, with no injuries reported.

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Taiwan said it was the first time mainland Chinese government vessels had entered restricted waters near an island it controls in the South China Sea.

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