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China-linked shipowner denies Taiwan accusation of damaging undersea cable

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      Taiwan suspects ship damaged undersea communication cables
    

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      Shipowner denies involvement, says 'no evidence' of
wrongdoing 
    

        * 
      Taiwan coast guard: unable to determine ship's real
intention
    

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      Incident has alarmed Taiwan's government
    

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      China says undersea cable damage a common 'maritime
accident'
    

  
 (Adds Chinese government comment in paragraphs 12-13)
    By James Pomfret and Yimou Lee
       HONG KONG/TAIPEI Jan 8 (Reuters) - The Chinese director
of a firm whose vessel Taiwan suspects of having damaged an
undersea communications cable said on Wednesday there was no
evidence the ship was involved, an incident that has alarmed the
government in Taipei.
    Taiwan's coast guard said it sent a ship to investigate a
report on Friday from telecoms provider Chunghwa Telecom that an
undersea communications cable had been damaged off the island's
north coast.
    Arriving at the scene it found the Chinese-crewed "Shunxin
39", registered both in Cameroon and Tanzania, which it
requested to return to port in Taiwan for an investigation.     
    In a statement, the coast guard said bad weather kept it
from boarding the ship for verification, but it "cannot rule out
the possibility" the ship was engaged in "grey zone" activities.
However, it did not provide any direct evidence of this.
    Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory, has
repeatedly complained about "grey zone" Chinese activities
around the island, designed to pressure it without direct
confrontation, such as balloon overflights and sand dredging.
    Taiwan's digital ministry has said the sea cable was cut on
Jan. 3 but service was not affected after backup cables were
activated.
    Radio communications were exchanged with the ship, which is
registered to a Hong Kong company called Jie Yang Trading,
shipping records show.
    In his first public comments on the incident, Guo Wenjie,
the director of Jie Yang, denied any involvement of the ship,
though confirming it was in the area. Taiwan authorities did not
detain it after radio exchanges with the captain, he added.
    "There's no evidence at all," he told Reuters by telephone,
dismissing the accusation that it was responsible for damage. "I
spoke to the ship captain and for us it was a normal trip."
    Speaking in Mandarin, Guo confirmed the ship was owned by
Jie Yang Trading, shown by Hong Kong companies registry records
to have been set up in 2020, with Guo as the sole director.
    Its listed Hong Kong address was a single room in a
co-sharing office space for a secretarial services company in a
gritty industrial building.
    
    'COMMON ACCIDENTS'
    In a written statement sent to Reuters late Wednesday,
China's Taiwan Affairs Office said globally there were more than
100 such incidents of damage to undersea cables a year and they
are "common maritime accidents".
    With the facts still unclear, Taiwan is making accusations
"out of thin air" and intentionally hyping up the "so-called
grey zone threat from the mainland", it added, without directly
saying whether the ship in question was involved or not.
    Taiwan, which strongly rejects China's sovereignty claims,
says communications were unaffected by the cable damage.
    Responding to Guo's comments, Taiwan's coast guard said it
was not yet able to gauge the ship's "real intention" from
tracking data.
    The vessel had lingered in the waters just off Taiwan's
north since early December until its transmitting signal was
turned off on Jan. 3, shipping data showed.
    Guo declined to specify why the ship had remained in the
area, or the purpose of the voyage, but said the Taiwan
authorities had only sought details of its GPS movements. 
    "I don't understand why there has been so much news about
this," Guo said. "The ship had dropped anchor, so it had stopped
in the nearby waters.
    "We followed the rules and normal procedures. If not, then
Taiwan would have investigated and detained us."
    The incident has alarmed Taiwan's security officials, who
are set to brief Taipei-based diplomats on the matter this week,
say sources familiar with the matter.
    "We must inform everyone that such behaviour doesn't just
affect Taiwan. It could also hit international communications,"
a senior Taiwan security official told Reuters on condition of
anonymity as the matter is a sensitive one. 
    "It is relevant to the interests of many countries." 
    Taiwan has been particularly nervous about the vulnerability
of undersea communications cables following incidents of
complaints by Baltic Sea nations since Russia's invasion of
Ukraine in 2022.
    Last month, Taiwan's Presidential Office held its first
"tabletop" exercise involving government agencies beyond the
armed forces, simulating scenarios such as a military escalation
with China and severed international sea links, officials said.
    In 2023, two undersea cables with the Taiwan-controlled
Matsu islands, which sit close to the Chinese coast, were cut,
disconnecting their 14,000 residents from the internet.
    Authorities said at the time initial findings showed a
Chinese fishing vessel and a Chinese freighter caused the
disruption, but there was no evidence Beijing deliberately
tampered with the cables.
    In recent years, Taiwan has worked to beef up its capacity
to cope with emergencies from disasters to military conflict,
including alternative communications such as satellites if its
international sea cables are cut.

 (Reporting by James Pomfret and Yimou Lee; Additional reporting
by Ryan Woo in Beijing; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by
Clarence Fernandez and Mark Potter)
 ((ben.blanchard@thomsonreuters.com;))

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