Fiery Cross Reef

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Fiery Cross Reef
Disputed island
Other names: Northwest Investigator Reef / Yongshu Reef / Kagitingan Reef / Đá Chữ Thập
File:Fiery Cross Reef LANDSAT 2000.jpg
Satellite image from 2000m
Geography
Location of Fiery Cross Reef
Location of Fiery Cross Reef
Location South China Sea
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Archipelago Spratly Islands
Area Natural: 0 ha
Reclaimed: 274 ha[1]
Administered by
People's Republic of China
Prefecture-level city Sansha
Claimed by
People's Republic of China
Philippines
Taiwan
Vietnam

Fiery Cross Reef, also known as "Northwest Investigator Reef", Yongshu Island (永暑岛) or Yongshu Reef (永暑礁) by the Chinese,[2] "Kagitingan Reef" by the Filipinos,[3] and "Đá Chữ Thập" by the Vietnamese, was a group of three reefs on the western edge of Dangerous Ground in the Spratly Islands of the South China Sea. The area is controlled by China (as part of Sansha[4]) and is also claimed by the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.

The reef was named after the Fiery Cross, a British Tea Clipper lost there on 4 March 1860 (later its more famous sister ship took the same name). The reef was surveyed by Lieutenant J. W. Reed of the HMS Rifleman, who reported it to be one extensive reef in 1867, and found the apparent wrecks of the Fiery Cross and the Meerschaum.[5]

Fiery Cross Reef has been occupied by China since 1988 when a UNESCO Marine observation station was built there.[citation needed] In 2014, China commenced reclamation activity in the area, and it has been converted into an artificial island of 2.74 square kilometres (1.06 sq mi).[1] There were around 200 Chinese troops on the reef in late 2014,[6] though this number was likely to have increased significantly in 2015 with the addition of support personnel for the new airbase (including 3,125 m-long runway) [7] and associated early warning radar site.[citation needed]

GLOSS sea level monitoring station

In 1987, following a UNESCO (IOC/UNESCO) meeting in March, it was agreed that the PRC would build weather stations in the South China sea as part of the Global Sea Level Observing System (GLOSS) survey.[8]

During the meeting of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO 17 March - 1 April in Paris, the Delegate of the People'Republic of China, speaking higly of GLOSS, noted a few mistakes in the text of Document IOC/INF-663 rev.; for instance, "Taiwan" is listed as a "country" in relevant Tables contained in the Document. He therefore requested that such mistakes be corrected in the forthcoming revision of the Document.[9] The scientists from Global Sea Level Observing System agreed that China would install tide gauges on what it considered to be its coasts in the East China Sea and on the "Nansha islands" in South China Sea. The scientists were unaware of regional political disputes, including Taiwanese territorial claims to one of the Spratly islands.[10]

In April 1987, the PRC chose to build a weather station on Fiery Cross reef as the reef was large enough for the purpose, and it was isolated from other disputed islands and reefs.[11] However, this caused further skirmishes with Vietnam when, in January 1988, some Vietnamese ships with construction materials tried to approach the reef in a bid to construct Vietnamese structures.

The weather station was commissioned by UNESCO's Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission(IOC). Construction was commenced in February 1988 and completed in August 1988.[12]

Land reclamation

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File:Fiery Cross Reef 2015.jpg
Fiery Cross Reef being transformed, May 2015

During 2014 the PRC government began reclamation activities to construct a large artificial island to support an approximately 3,300 metres (10,800 ft) airstrip and seaport.[13][14][15] Although the PRC has a 3,000 metres (9,800 ft) runway in the Paracel Islands, China had been at a "distinct disadvantage" compared with other claimants in the Spratly Islands as it was the only claimant that did not have an island hosting an airfield. The airport was completed in January 2016, and is currently the southernmost one within the area controlled by the People's Republic of China.[16][17] China also test-landed civil aircraft, two airliners, one from China Southern Airlines and another from Hainan Airlines, there in January 2016.[18][19]

See also

References

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  10. "South China Sea Treacherous Shoals", Far Eastern Economic Review, August, 13 1992: p14-17
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  16. http://cablenews.i-cable.com/webapps/news_video/index.php?news_id=473722
  17. http://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1234041-20160106.htm
  18. http://www.wsj.com/articles/china-lands-test-flight-in-disputed-island-chain-1451794765
  19. http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2016/01/07/1540201/2-chinese-commercial-planes-land-kagitingan-reef