Danish navy intercepts Chinese vessel in cable sabotage probe
The Danish Navy reached the Chinese bulk carrier Yi Peng 3 in the Kattegat Strait. The vessel is likely responsible for damaging telecommunications cables on the Baltic Sea floor.
8:48 AM EST, November 20, 2024
The Danish Navy reached the Chinese bulk carrier Yi Peng 3 in the Kattegat Strait. The vessel is likely responsible for damaging telecommunications cables on the Baltic Sea floor.
The Danish military forces confirmed on Wednesday that they reached the Chinese vessel Yi Peng 3 in the Kattegat Strait. Forsvaret, the Danish Ministry of Defense, announced the achievement.
They reached the Chinese bulk carrier Yi Peng. No arrest occurred
The ministry stated on social media that representatives of the Ministry of Defense are present near the ship. However, the post mentions, "The Danish Defense currently has no further comments."
Speculation in the Danish media concerned the possibility of the Danish Navy seizing the ship. Publicly accessible websites tracking maritime traffic indicated the close presence of a Danish patrol vessel next to the Chinese freighter.
However, according to an expert quoted by "Berlingske," Yi Peng 3 has already left Danish territorial waters. Professor Kristina Siig from the University of Southern Denmark, an expert in maritime law, emphasized that the suspicions would not justify an arrest.
The specialist said that even though Denmark may have justifiable suspicions about the ship's involvement in cable disruptions, the officials have no right to board it, search it, or interrogate the crew. She also mentioned that if the ship is in international waters, the only option is to request permission to board from China.
Two submarine cables, one connecting Lithuania to Sweden and the other Finland to Germany, were destroyed on Sunday and Monday in the Swedish economic zone. The police in Stockholm have investigated this matter, considering the possibility of sabotage.
The Danish Navy vessel P525, and then another ship HDMS Soeloeven, reached the Chinese bulk carrier on the evening of November 19. The Chinese ship was sailing from the Russian port of Ust-Luga.
This is not the first time a Chinese marine vessel has damaged strategic infrastructure in the Baltic Sea. In October 2023, the Balticconnector gas pipeline connecting Estonia and Finland was breached.
An anchor dropped from the Chinese container ship Newnew Polar Bear damaged the gas pipeline. The vessel was suspected of being responsible for that incident from the beginning; however, no decision was made to detain it, and it escaped from the Baltic Sea without consequences.