Chinese maritime authorities have pledged to push forward cooperation in
maritime search and rescue operations with their counterparts from members of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, according to maritime officials.
The Maritime Safety
Administration, or MSA, has been actively promoting and pursuing closer ties
with maritime institutions in ASEAN countries in maritime search and rescue,
but given the current situation, the administration needs more time before it
can create a comprehensive mechanism, officials with the administration told
China Daily.
A Chinese doctor checks the leg
of an Indonesian child during a disaster relief exercise in Manado, Indonesia,
on March 16, 2011. Chen Xiaowei / Xinhua
The officials spoke on the
sidelines of the 8th Meeting on the ASEAN-China Maritime Consultation
Mechanism, held in Zhuhai, Guangdong province.
From October 2011 to September
2012, Chinese maritime safety authorities responded to 17 requests for help
from ships registered in five ASEAN countries, including Vietnam, Singapore and
Malaysia, according to the MSA.
More than half of the requests
came from Vietnamese vessels, whose country shares a vast area of the South
China Sea with China.
During the same period, the China
Maritime Search and Rescue Center and its local branches received 2,565
emergency alerts and conducted more than 2,000 SAR operations. Nearly 1,600
ships were retrieved, and more than 17,500 people rescued.
Chinese officials picked Vietnam
as a good example of how China has gradually strengthened its maritime SAR
cooperation with other countries.
Since a maritime SAR cooperation
agreement concerning a sea route linking China's Fangcheng Port and the Ha Long
Bay in Vietnam was inked in 2003, maritime departments in the two countries
have joined hands in 15 maritime SAR operations that saved 93 lives, said Shen
Chunsheng, deputy director of the maritime safety administration in the Guangxi
Zhuang autonomous region.
Guangxi is the only Chinese
provincial-level region that shares both land borders and maritime boundaries
with Vietnam.
On Aug 28, the Guangxi Maritime
Search and Rescue Center and Vietnam Maritime Search and Rescue Coordination
Center jointly carried out a drill to exercise emergency-response
communications, which is among a small number of such drills between China and
ASEAN countries.
The drill set seven scenarios
involving emergency reporting, rescue coordination and remote medical
treatment, and effectively improved the two sides' cooperation in maritime SAR,
according to Shen.
The two sides also have shown
good will to each other by providing assistance to people trapped in other's
territorial waters in a timely manner, he said, citing some recent cases.
Eight Vietnamese sailors were
rescued on Monday by the Chinese maritime authority after the Vietnamese cargo
ship sank off the Fangcheng Port in Guangxi amid typhoon Son-Tinh. Ten of their
peers were previously saved on Oct 21 by Chinese water police officers from
another capsized cargo ship.
Also in October, China sent a
ship to the Bach Long Vi Island, which is under Vietnam's jurisdiction, to take
back three Chinese fishermen who were rescued by Vietnamese fishermen and then
took care of by Vietnamese maritime officers after their ship capsized.
"The two sides are still
exploring new ways to deepen maritime SAR cooperation. The Guangxi Maritime
Search and Rescue Center has been discussing with Vietnamese maritime
authorities the possibility of setting up a regular communication
mechanism," Shen said.
Phan Nguyen Hai Ha, deputy
director of the international cooperation department under the Vietnam Maritime
Administration, said at the meeting that Vietnam is grateful for the Guangxi
center's rescuing its citizens and is willing to increase its cooperation with
China in maritime SAR operations.
Though achievements have been
reached, there is still plenty of room for improvement between China and
Vietnam in maritime SAR cooperation, Shen said. He mentioned some problems that
need work, such as inadequate communications, a shortage of SAR professionals,
and occasionally slow responses to emergencies.
The two sides will take more
measures to create a better cooperative relationship, he added.
In addition to Vietnam,
representatives from other countries also expressed interest in increasing
their cooperation with China in maritime issues.
"I think this meeting is
very important for ASEAN countries and China to enhance their cooperation in
maritime issues," Nhem Savong, deputy director of merchant marine
department in Cambodia's Ministry of Public Works and Transport, told China
Daily on Wednesday.
"We can get experience from
China (through such meetings), and also China can assist ASEAN countries in
some maritime sectors so that we can improve."
Baharin Abdul Hamid, deputy
director general of Marine Department of Malaysia, agreed. "This meeting is
very informative. From here we can see the development within the ASEAN region
and China in fields such as the safety of ships. We believe this forum will
foster closer ties with China in terms of maritime cooperation," he said.
Zhao Lei in Zhuhai
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