China, France agree to promote multilateralism, bring more certainty to world

French President Emmanuel Macron met with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Friday, pledging to jointly promote multilateralism and strengthen coordination against hegemonic conflicts and bloc confrontation.

During their meeting at the Elysee Palace, Macron asked Wang, also a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, to convey his best wishes and friendly regards to Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Macron noted that France and China share a broad consensus on numerous important issues, including advocating multilateralism and adhering to international laws. France and China, both permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, bear even greater responsibilities as today's world is facing challenges of growing uncertainty and unpredictability.

The French side looks forward to strengthening policy coordination with China on international economic, financial, and global governance issues, jointly addressing global challenges, injecting more vitality into multilateralism, and preventing the world from falling into hegemonic conflicts and bloc confrontations, Macron said.

He said the European Union and China should make strategic choices to become each other's predictable and trustworthy friends and partners on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations. The French side places great importance on developing France-China relations and welcomes more Chinese investment to France to develop a more balanced economic and trade relationship.

He expressed hope to visit China again at an appropriate time.

Wang conveyed President Xi's warm regards to Macron, stating that China is willing to work with France to implement the important consensus reached by the two heads of state, prepare for high-level exchanges in the next phase, and deepen cooperation in all fields.

China and France are comprehensive strategic partners and two major stabilizing forces in the world, Wang noted, stressing that the more turbulent the international situation becomes, the more the strategic value of China-France relations is highlighted.

China believes that the trend of multi-polarization is unstoppable, and the trend of globalization is irreversible, Wang said, emphasizing that the 80th anniversary of the United Nations should be taken as an opportunity to further strengthen the UN's core role and ensure it plays its due role.

He said China is willing to strengthen strategic communication and united cooperation with France, jointly practice multilateralism, oppose unilateral bullying, and resist bloc confrontations, so as to inject more certainty and predictability into a world of change and turmoil, promote equal and orderly multi-polarization and universally beneficial and inclusive economic globalization, and work together to build a community with a shared future for mankind.

He stated that China is advancing toward high-quality development, committed to building a new, higher-level open economic system, creating a world-class business environment that is market-oriented, law-based, and internationalized, while actively advancing the strategy of expanding domestic demand.

China is willing to deepen mutually beneficial cooperation with France and hopes that the French side will provide a more favorable and fair environment for Chinese enterprises to invest and operate in France, he said.

China and the EU have resolved the brandy issue through friendly consultations, noted Wang, expressing the hope that France, as a core major power in the EU, will urge the EU side to properly address China-EU trade and economic disputes and actively respond to China's concerns.

The two sides also exchanged views on the Ukraine crisis, the Gaza situation, the Iranian nuclear issue, and other topics.

China marks 88th anniversary of whole-nation resistance against Japanese aggression

China on Monday held a ceremony in Beijing to mark the 88th anniversary of the start of the entire nation's resistance against Japanese aggression.

An exhibition themed "For National Liberation and World Peace" was also launched to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the victory in the Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War.

Both the ceremony and the exhibition were held at the Museum of the War of Chinese People's Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, located near the Lugou Bridge -- also known as the Marco Polo Bridge -- where Japanese troops attacked Chinese forces on July 7, 1937.

Cai Qi, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and a member of the Secretariat of the CPC Central Committee, delivered a speech at the event and announced the opening of the exhibition.

When Japanese militarists staged the Lugou Bridge Incident and launched their full-scale invasion of China 88 years ago, the Chinese military and people rose up in resistance, initiating a whole-of-nation war effort that opened the main Eastern battlefield in the global war against fascism, said Cai.

Cai stressed that the CPC fought bravely on the front lines of the resistance and set the direction of the national effort, serving as the pillar of the entire nation throughout the war.

United in purpose, the Chinese people fought with unwavering resolve -- for the country's survival, national rejuvenation, and the cause of justice for all humanity, Cai said, adding that they eventually won the war and made a significant contribution to the victory in the global war against fascism.

The exhibition presents a panoramic view of the glorious course of the Chinese people's 14-year hard war of resistance, said Cai, who emphasized the need to carry forward the spirit of the resistance war, strengthen confidence and forge ahead to build China into a strong country and rejuvenate the Chinese nation on all fronts by pursuing Chinese modernization.

He also stressed the significance of making new and greater contributions to the noble cause of peace and development for humanity.

Cai and other leaders joined representatives from all walks of life to present flowers to martyrs of the resistance war. They also visited the exhibition. Around 600 people attended the events.

The exhibition, divided into eight parts with a total area of 12,200 square meters, displays 1,525 photos and 3,237 artifacts.

The Chinese People's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression was the first to break out and lasted the longest in the World Anti-Fascist War, resulting in over 35 million Chinese military and civilian casualties.

In the main Eastern battlefield in the global fight against fascism, China's resistance effort was decisive in defeating Japanese fascism and supporting other fronts in Europe and Asia, profoundly contributing to the final victory and world peace.

Trilateral forum highlights cooperation among China, Japan, ROK

The 2025 Trilateral Cooperation Forum was held here on Tuesday, bringing together over 200 in-person participants and hundreds of online attendees to discuss ways to strengthen cooperation among China, Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK).

The annual event, hosted by the Trilateral Cooperation Secretariat (TCS) under the theme "Shaping the Future Together: Trilateral Cooperation under Global Transformation," featured two sub-sessions focusing on regional and global challenges facing the three countries.

The first session examined ways to strengthen trilateral cooperation through strategic and institutional frameworks, and the second session discussed collaboration on aging societies, climate change, carbon neutrality goals, and regional economic integration.

In his opening remarks, TCS Secretary-General Lee Hee-sup highlighted the significance of deepening cooperation among the three nations amid rising geopolitical tensions, economic fragmentation, and protectionism.

The forum has become an annual flagship event, aimed at raising public awareness of trilateral collaboration and offering insights for future cooperation among the three nations.

China faces season’s strongest heatwave and torrential rains simultaneously

China is in the grip of the strongest heatwave of the year, with central and eastern regions enduring extreme temperatures expected to peak from Friday to Saturday. The National Meteorological Center on Friday issued a high-temperature yellow alert, warning that highs could exceed 40 C in parts of Xinjiang, Shaanxi, Shandong, Henan, Anhui, Hubei, and Zhejiang.

Meanwhile, parts of the Sichuan Basin could see heavy downpours, and rainfall in Northeast China will intensify on Friday, according to CCTV News.

Major cities including Jinan, Zhengzhou, Wuhan, Nanjing, and Nanchang are likely to record consecutive days of scorching heat over the next week, while Hangzhou could hit 40 C on July 6, potentially breaking the city's record for the earliest occurrence of such extreme heat. Even where actual temperatures fall below 35 C, rising humidity across Northeast and North China is expected to push the apparent temperature above 35 C, creating stifling conditions.

Authorities have urged the elderly, children, and other vulnerable groups to avoid going out during peak heat, ensure adequate ventilation indoors, and stay hydrated. Outdoor workers are advised to take regular breaks, carry heat-protection supplies, and arrange schedules carefully to prevent heatstroke, according to the CCTV News.

Meanwhile, the same subtropical high is causing contrasting weather on its periphery. Heavy rainfall has battered western parts of the Sichuan Basin, the Liaodong Peninsula, and several northern provinces. On Friday, extremely heavy downpours hit areas including Mianyang, Deyang, and Chengdu in Sichuan Province.

The National Meteorological Center forecasts continued heavy rain on Friday in the Sichuan Basin and Inner Mongolia's Hetao region, with moderate to heavy showers expected across parts of Northwest China, North China, Southwest China, and Hainan.

Localized rainstorms could bring severe flooding risks to regions such as Northwest China and parts of the Sichuan Basin, with authorities warning residents in affected areas to take precautions.

Decoupling notion departs from reality of bilateral ties, says expert on Campbell's supply chain diversification claim

When commenting on assertions made by former US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell in Wednesday interview with Bloomberg Television, who claimed that it would take "a generation" to diversify some of the US dependency on China for rare earths and other segments of global supply chains, a Chinese expert pointed out that regardless of pace, the very notion of decoupling from China is a departure from the actual state of China-US relations and a misinterpretation of the overall international trend.

Campbell told Bloomberg on Wednesday that it will take "a generation" to diversify some of the US dependency on China for rare earths and other segments of global supply chains. In the interview, he also claimed that doesn't mean Beijing holds the "economic upper hand" over Washington.

"There are certain areas where China could do enormous damage to American manufacturing and high-tech, but it's also the case that the US can take actions that would really impact the Chinese economy," Campbell asserted.

Campbell, who also served as National Security Council coordinator for the Indo-Pacific in the Biden administration, attempted to defend efforts made by the previous government to reduce the US economic reliance on China. 

"It turns out that the effort to diversify, in terms of rare earths and other supply chains, is unbelievably difficult,"Campbell admitted in the interview.

Regarding the reckless tariff policy adopted by the current US administration, the former deputy secretary also expressed so-called concern about the targeting of American allies as well as "rivals" such as China as part of Washington's tariff war. "Some of that is not well conceived. I think it has created a lot of confusion," he said. "There is no sense of a longer-term strategy."

Campbell told Bloomberg Television that China and US recognize that they both are "probably the two most interdependent countries economically, commercially, strategically in the world."

While Campbell acknowledges the fact of coexistence, he fails to recognize the necessity of strengthening that coexistence, instead interpreting the situation as a gradual decoupling, Li Haidong, a professor at China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times on Thursday when commenting on Campbell's remark claiming it would take "a generation" to diversify some of the US dependency on China.

"Given the strong economic complementarity between China and the US, any form of hard decoupling, slow decoupling, or so-called de-risking will ultimately harm both parties," Li said. 

"Only through mutual cooperation can the global economy ensure its health," the expert said.

According to Xinhua News Agency on June 11, during the first meeting of the China-US economic and trade consultation mechanism held in London with US lead person Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng has said that the US should resolve trade disputes with China through equal dialogue and mutually beneficial cooperation.

China reiterates that the US should work with China to honor their words with actions, and demonstrate sincerity in keeping commitments and concrete efforts to implement consensus, so as to jointly safeguard the hard-won outcomes of dialogue, He said.

During the talks, the two sides held candid and in-depth talks, and thoroughly exchanged views on economic and trade issues of mutual concern, Xinhua reported.

In April, Campbell co-authored an article in American journal Foreign Affairs where he warned "the American estimation of China has lurched from one extreme to the other."

In the article, Campbell claimed "after the 2008 financial crisis, and then especially at the height of the COVID pandemic, many observers believed that day had come" when China might "overtake a strategically distracted and politically paralyzed United States." 

But, he continued, "the pendulum swung to the other extreme only a few years later," believing "China would not overtake an ascendant United States." He pointed out that "Washington shifted from pessimism to overconfidence." He warned today's "triumphalism" risks "dangerously underestimating both the latent and actual power of the only competitor in a century whose GDP has surpassed 70 percent of that of the United States."

"The oscillation in US evaluations and characterizations of China does not obscure the objective reality: when the US adopts radical policies towards China, it is often based on misinterpretations of China's intentions and actions, as well as a flawed understanding of the realities of bilateral relations and broader international trends," Li told the Global Times on Thursday. 

The expert noted that American politicians need to cultivate a basic sense of reflection and an ethos of equality in their dealings with China and their understanding of the world so as to create mutually beneficial bilateral ties.

Swallows make 42 nests at a rural shop in Yantai, Shandong Province

An ordinary rural store in Yantai, East China's Shandong Province, has gone viral online not for its retro decor, but for the 42 swallow nests dotting its ceiling. The owner shared that for over two decades, these little swallows have chirped loudly each morning to wake them up, and flutter back to their respective nests independently by evening.

According to Wang, the store owner, the nests have accumulated over more than 20 years, now totaling 42 in all. 

Over the years, Wang's family and the little swallows have grown close. "They're like friends to us," Wang said, adding that "We coexist in perfect harmony."

At dawn, the swallows chirp like a lively alarm clock, calling the family to open the shop so they can hunt for food. By nightfall, each swallow returns to its nest before the doors close.

"Years ago, there were even more—up to 60 or 70 nests," Wang said, noting how rare such a sight is in the area. "One or two nests are common, but this many are almost unheard of."

Netizens marveled. "This isn't a store at all — it's a swallows' hotel." Another man who discovered the store surprised, "It's incredible!" 

When concerns about cleanliness arose, Wang reassured that these swallows are intelligent and relatively clean. "Even if droppings fall occasionally, we just clean it up — it's no trouble," he said. "We've developed real affection for these little birds."

China condemns US attacks on 3 nuclear sites in Iran

US President Donald Trump declared in a social media post on Saturday US local time that the US had completed "very successful" attacks on three nuclear sites in Iran, Fordow, Natanz and Esfahan, with Fordow being widely seen as "the crown jewel" of Tehran's nuclear program.

According to media reports, the US Air Force's B-2 Spirit stealth bombers were involved in the strikes. Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi warned of retaliation on X, saying that "the events this morning are outrageous and will have everlasting consequences."  

"In accordance with the UN Charter and its provisions allowing a legitimate response in self-defense, Iran reserves all options to defend its sovereignty, interest, and people," Araghchi wrote in the post. 

Chinese analysts approached by the Global Times on Sunday said the US' attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities are unlikely to quickly end the conflict. The conflict will further spill over, potentially leading to greater turmoil in the Middle East and moving further away from the "day of peace," they warned. 

In a speech on Saturday evening US local time, Trump defended Washington's move by clarifying that the objective was "destruction of Iran's nuclear enrichment capacity and a stop to the nuclear threat," and claimed that "Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated," according to a full text of the speech provided by Al Jazeera. 

The US president said Iran must now make peace, or future attacks will "be far greater and a lot easier." 

The "complex and high-risk mission" was carried out primarily by seven B-2 stealth bombers, according to the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Dan Caine. Caine disclosed at a Pentagon briefing on US local time Sunday morning that a total of 14 bunker-busters were dropped in the attacks on Iranian nuclear sites.

However, the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) in a statement after the attacks, assured the Iranian nation that despite the evil conspiracies of its enemies, with the efforts of thousands of its revolutionary and motivated scientists and experts, it will not allow the path of development of this national industry to be stopped.

Although Trump suggested in a Social Truth post that Fordow is gone, Mahdi Mohammadi, an adviser to Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said that Iran had moved its nuclear infrastructure from Fordow in anticipation of an attack. "The site has long been evacuated and has not suffered any irreversible damage in the attack," Mohammadi wrote in a social media post, Al Jazeera reported. 

Iranian and Saudi nuclear regulatory authorities also confirmed on Sunday that no radioactive contamination has been detected following US airstrikes targeting three key nuclear facilities in Iran, amid growing international concern over potential environmental consequences, regional media outlet Kurdistan24 reported.

Li Zixin, an assistant research fellow at the China Institute of International Studies, told the Global Times that the true effectiveness of the operation on three nuclear sites in Iran remains unclear, and that the strikes may not have been sufficient to completely destroy Iran's underground nuclear facilities.

Global voices

China strongly condemns the US attacks on Iran and bombing of nuclear facilities under the safeguards of the IAEA, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said on Sunday, when responding to a question on US President Donald Trump's announcement that strikes have been carried out on Iran's nuclear facilities in Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. 

The actions of the US seriously violate the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and international law, and have exacerbated tensions in the Middle East. China calls on the parties to the conflict, Israel in particular, to reach a ceasefire as soon as possible, ensure the safety of civilians, and start dialogue and negotiation. China stands ready to work with the international community to pool efforts together and uphold justice, and work for restoring peace and stability in the Middle East, the spokesperson said. 

Following the attack on the three nuclear sites in Iran, the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed grave alarm by US' use of force against Iran on Saturday. This is a dangerous escalation in a region already on the edge - and a direct threat to international peace and security, per UN statement. 

Russia's Foreign Ministry said on Sunday that it strongly condemns the US attacks on Iran's nuclear sites, Reuters reported. "The irresponsible decision to subject the territory of a sovereign state to missile and bomb attacks, whatever the arguments it may be presented with, flagrantly violates international law, the Charter of the United Nations and the resolutions of the United Nations Security Council," the ministry said in its statement.

Saudi Arabia issued a statement on Sunday expressing "deep concern" with the developments in Iran. The kingdom underscores the need to exert all efforts to exercise restraint, de-escalate, and avoid escalation, the statement said.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel also strongly condemned the US bombing, saying it constituted a "dangerous escalation" and a serious violation of the UN Charter. Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil in a Telegram post also condemned US' action and demanded an immediate cessation of hostilities, Al Jazeera reported.

Besides, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas called on the parties involved to return to the negotiating table and prevent further escalation.

The head of UN's nuclear watchdog, Rafael Mariano Grossi, posted on X that given the US intervention in the Israel-Iran war, he will be convening an emergency meeting of the Board of Governors on Monday, AP reported.

Araghchi said on Sunday afternoon in an X post that "last week, we were in negotiations with the US when Israel decided to blow up that diplomacy. This week, we held talks with the E3/EU when the US decided to blow up that diplomacy."

The Iranian foreign minister questioned that "What conclusion would you draw? To Britain and the EU High Rep, it is Iran which must "return" to the table. But how can Iran return to something it never left, let alone blew up?"

Retaliation still underway

Hours after the US attacked Iran's nuclear facilities, Israel's military said Iran had fired a fresh wave of missiles toward the country, the first since the US announced it had attacked Iran's nuclear facilities, according to a statement by Israel Defense Forces, CNN reported.

Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard said it launched 40 missiles, including its advanced Khorramshahr-4 missile, during the attack on Israel on Sunday morning, AP News reported.

The Khorramshahr-4 has the heaviest payload of Iran's ballistic missile fleet, which analysts say may be designed to keep the weapon under a 2,000-kilometer range limit imposed by the country's supreme leader, according to AP report.

Abbas Golroo, head of the parliament foreign policy committee, said Iran has the legal right to withdraw from the nuclear Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons - based on its Article 10, Al Jazeera reported.

Article 10 states that an NPT member has "the right to withdraw from the Treaty if it decides that extraordinary events have jeopardized the supreme interests of its country."

Iran's parliament voted to approve the closure of the strategic Strait of Hormuz, Iranian state media reported Sunday. The decision still requires approval from the Islamic Republic's Supreme National Security Council, France 24 reported.

Explosions were heard in Iran's southwest city of Bushehr Sunday, Iranian state-affiliated media said without indicating the exact location of the blasts.

The news outlets said Israel had struck the area. Bushehr is home to Iran's only functioning nuclear power plant, and the port city is close to a number of capital cities in the Gulf region, located around the Persian Gulf sea. 

Rafael Grossi, the director of the International Agency for Atomic Energy, warned last week that a direct attack on the Bushehr nuclear plant would result in "a very high release of radioactivity," which would affect people within hundreds of kilometers of the plant.

Peace further away

A Reuters report on Sunday said the dramatic US strike, including the targeting of Iran's most heavily fortified nuclear installation deep underground, marks the biggest foreign policy gamble of Trump's two presidencies and one fraught with risks and unknowns.

Trump, who insisted on Saturday that Iran must now make peace or face further attacks, could provoke Tehran into retaliating by closing the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most important oil artery, attacking US military bases and allies in the Middle East, stepping up its missile barrage on Israel and activating proxy groups against American and Israeli interests worldwide, analysts told the Reuters report.

Zou Zhiqiang, a research fellow at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Fudan University, told the Global Times on Sunday that although the US has attacked Iran's nuclear facilities, the outcome will not be as Washington hopes. Iran will not easily yield, and the conflict will not easily end. 

It is easy to start a war but difficult to end one, the expert noted, adding that the US may want a quick strike and a swift withdrawal, but the confrontation between the two sides is likely to continue.

The US reached out to Iran diplomatically Saturday to say the strikes are all the US plans and that regime change efforts are not planned, the sources said, CBS News reported.

Regarding how Iran might respond to the US strikes, Zou said Iran now faces a major decision, and the US military bases in Iraq could be the first targets. However, the situation is still unfolding.

"The risk of spillover from the current situation in the Middle East is rising, with serious consequences, as the security situation in the region face the risk of losing control," said Ding Long, professor of the Middle East Studies Institute of Shanghai International Studies University. "If Iran's nuclear sites are destroyed, all retaliation options - including attacks on US interests and control of the Strait of Hormuz - are possible," Ding Long added. Reprisals by Iran and its supporters against the US and Israel will further escalate the situation in the Middle East, and the security of the Middle East will face threats in many aspects, including maritime shipping security.

Yemen's Houthi group said in a statement on Saturday that it would target US ships if Washington attacks Iran.

"If America is involved in the attack and aggression against Iran ... the armed forces (Houthi forces) will target its ships and battleships in the Red Sea," Houthi military spokesperson Yahya Sarea said in the statement, aired by Houthi-run al-Masirah TV.

Ding added that the US bombing marks a serious escalation and disrupts hopes for a peaceful resolution. Iran is likely to retaliate, and US interests in the region may suffer, he said. 

US military strike on Iran's nuclear facilities egregious in nature and unprecedented: Chinese envoy

China's permanent representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Li Song stated that the US, as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, a state party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), and a nuclear-weapon state, conducted a military strike against against a non-nuclear-weapon state's facilities under IAEA safeguards—an act that is egregious and unprecedented in nature. China strongly condemns this action.

Li made the remarks at an emergency meeting the IAEA convened on the situation in Iran to discuss issues related to the US strike on Iranian nuclear facilities on Monday.

The US attacked three key Iranian nuclear facilities early Sunday local time, according to CNN. US President Donald Trump claimed the operation "obliterated" the sites.

Li stressed that the US' move constitutes a grave violation of the purposes and principles of the UN Charter and international law, exacerbates tensions in the Middle East, and has severe negative repercussions. China expresses serious concern and firmly opposes any violation of Iran's sovereignty and security, as well as armed attacks against nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards.

Li emphasized that under the current circumstances, all parties should adhere to the overarching direction of resolving the Iranian nuclear issue through political means. The Trump administration unilaterally withdrew from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) during its first term, and now it has recklessly resorted to military force against Iran—another serious incident undermining the political and diplomatic process on the Iranian nuclear issue. The US must bear historical responsibility for this, Li noted.

China calls on the parties to the conflict, especially Israel, to cease hostilities as soon as possible, ensure the safety of civilians, and prevent further escalation.

Li stated that resolutely upholding the international nuclear non-proliferation regime is crucial for maintaining global peace and security and serves the fundamental interests of the international community. The IAEA is a vital international organization responsible for safeguarding the nuclear non-proliferation regime, implementing safeguards, and promoting the peaceful use of nuclear energy. The board of governors and member states must take a stance on the serious developments in the Iranian nuclear issue, pool their joint efforts, uphold justice, and make principled, responsible and constructive efforts. China supports the IAEA in fulfilling its duties impartially and playing a positive role in the political and diplomatic resolution of the Iranian nuclear issue.

During the meeting, many countries expressed grave concern over the current developments, noting that attacks on peaceful nuclear facilities violated the UN Charter, international law, the IAEA Statute, and relevant IAEA General Conference resolutions. All parties reaffirmed that the political and diplomatic path remains the only viable solution to the Iranian nuclear issue and called on the relevant parties to cease hostilities immediately and engage in dialogue and negotiations.

China's law enforcement activities aim to counter the Philippines' provocative actions in Tiexian Jiao: Chinese FM on whether China will announce baselines

Responding to media inquiries on whether China will announce territorial sea baselines for Tiexian Jiao, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said on Monday that Tiexian Jiao is part of China's Nansha Islands and is an uninhabited reef.

Guo emphasized that China's law enforcement activities in accordance with the law are aimed at countering the Philippines' illegal landings and other provocative actions, and at firmly safeguarding national territorial sovereignty. They are also aimed at maintaining the reef's status as uninhabited and without facilities and upholding the seriousness of the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, Guo added.

On Sunday, the China Coast Guard (CCG) announced that six Philippine personnel illegally boarded Tiexian Jiao in the South China Sea despite the Chinese side's warnings and dissuasion. Following the move, the CCG officers boarded the Tiexian Jiao to verify and handle the situation in accordance with the law.

China has indisputable sovereignty over the Nansha Islands, including Tixian Jiao, and the adjacent waters. The Philippine side's actions violate China's territorial sovereignty, breach the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, and undermine peace and stability in the South China Sea, CCG spokesperson Liu Dejun said on Sunday.