Thursday, May 5, 2016

China deploys folk singer to disputed Spratly Islands

From BBC (May 4): China deploys folk singer to disputed Spratly Islands

Blurry image taken from Chinese TV footage shows workers gathering near a Chinese military ship during a performance on Fiery Cross Reef in the South China Sea (May 2016)

Images of the performance revealed details of the islands

Her career has taken her round the world but popular Chinese folk singer Song Zuying's latest tour has taken her to new destinations - very new.
 
The military chanteuse entertained workers on Fiery Cross Reef in the Spratlys in the South China Sea.

It is the first stop in a tour of the disputed territory, where China has been reclaiming land and building military facilities on reefs.

Photos of the performance reveal multi-story buildings and a large warship.

Several Asian countries, including Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam, also claim sovereignty over the reefs and islands of the Spratlys.
China has been building artificial islands there, saying the structures are for civilian purposes, but neighbouring countries are concerned at their possible military use.

Q&A: South China Sea dispute



Popular Chinese military folk singer Song Zuying has performed around the world

Satellite images of Fiery Cross Reef (CNES 2015, Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image / IHS)

Satellite images of Fiery Cross Reef were published last year (CNES 2015, Distribution Airbus DS / Spot Image / IHS)

The performance by Song and a 50-strong troupe of navy entertainers included magic tricks and songs such as "Ode to the South Sea Defenders".

It took place in front of the People's Liberation Army's second biggest ship, using a large naval dock.

The BBC's Stephen McDonell says photos from the performance, which was first revealed on Tuesday by state media, show the extent of the infrastructure being built on Fiery Cross.

Images published by the South China Morning Post show large crowds of military personnel enjoying the show on Saturday against a backdrop of the new facilities.

China turned the reef into an artificial island through a massive dredging operation, and constructed buildings and an air strip.

Rival countries have wrangled over territory in the South China Sea for centuries, but tension has steadily increased in recent years.

 Map of the South China Sea

China's so-called "nine dash line" (here as a solid blue line) is the basis of all its South China Sea claims

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-36203496

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