Japan releases Chinese fishing boat captain after brief arrest

Japanese authorities released a Chinese fishing boat captain on Friday night, just one day after his arrest for refusing an inspection in Japan's exclusive economic zone. The release came after China guaranteed payment of cash collateral. The incident underscores ongoing tensions between Tokyo and Beijing.

On Thursday, February 12, 2026, Japanese authorities seized a Chinese fishing vessel and arrested its captain, Zheng Nianli, 47, a Chinese national, after the boat refused an order to stop for inspection in Japan's exclusive economic zone off Nagasaki Prefecture. The incident occurred 89.4 nautical miles (166 kilometers) south-southwest of Meshima island, a location not in disputed waters.

According to Japan's fisheries agency, the vessel fled after the order. Local media, including public broadcaster NHK, reported that the captain was released Friday night after China guaranteed payment of cash collateral. This marks the first seizure of a Chinese vessel since 2022.

The episode comes three months after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi suggested Japan would intervene militarily if Beijing sought to take Taiwan by force. In response, China summoned Japan's ambassador, warned its citizens against visiting Japan, conducted joint air drills with Russia, and tightened export controls on items with potential military uses to Japan, raising concerns over supplies of vital rare-earth minerals.

China called on Japan to respect the safety and rights of the Chinese crew. Multiple calls to the fisheries agency went unanswered Saturday morning. A similar 2010 arrest of a Chinese fishing boat captain in the East China Sea escalated into a major diplomatic incident between the two nations.

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Illustration of Japanese destroyer JS Ikazuchi transiting Taiwan Strait amid Chinese military surveillance and protests.
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China protests Japanese destroyer Ikazuchi's Taiwan Strait transit as 'deliberate provocation'

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Beijing accused Japan of 'deliberate provocation' after the destroyer JS Ikazuchi transited the Taiwan Strait on Friday, undermining peace and stability. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said China lodged a strong protest with Tokyo, while the military tracked and handled the incident in accordance with regulations. Japan's Self-Defense Forces declined to comment.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi expressed 'serious concern' over attacks on vessels around the Strait of Hormuz during an online G7 leaders' meeting, urging early de-escalation. Japan plans to lead in releasing oil reserves to avert an economic crisis through international coordination.

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A 499-ton cargo ship collided with a 16-ton fishing boat anchored off Toba in Mie Prefecture on Friday, killing two of the 13 people on board. Ten others were injured, and one was rescued later. The Japan Transport Safety Board is dispatching investigators.

A Chinese Navy warship challenged a Philippine aircraft during a routine patrol near Bajo de Masinloc on Monday morning. For the first time, Philippine Coast Guard officials suspect possible signal jamming by China after Starlink connections repeatedly dropped in the area. The incident occurs amid ongoing tensions in the West Philippine Sea.

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Japan is increasing fishery-related aid to Indonesia's remote Natuna Islands in the southern South China Sea, aiming to counter China's influence. Through the Japan International Cooperation Agency, Tokyo plans to fund the development of a fish market in Ranai, the main city on Bunguran Island. The area sees overlap between Indonesia's exclusive economic zone and China's contested "nine-dash line" claim.

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