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Malaysia Arrests 6 Chinese Fishing Vessels With 60 Men in Territorial Waters, Reports Say

© AFP 2023 / MOHD RASFANA member of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency officer uses a pair of binoculars to scan the sea during the rescue operation for the missing sailors from the USS John S. McCain off the Johor coast of Malaysia on August 24, 2017. - The US destroyer John S. McCain collided with a tanker early on August 21 as the warship prepared to make a routine port call in Singapore, leaving a gaping hole in its hull and 10 sailors missing.
A member of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency officer uses a pair of binoculars to scan the sea during the rescue operation for the missing sailors from the USS John S. McCain off the Johor coast of Malaysia on August 24, 2017. - The US destroyer John S. McCain collided with a tanker early on August 21 as the warship prepared to make a routine port call in Singapore, leaving a gaping hole in its hull and 10 sailors missing. - Sputnik International
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MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA) arrested six Chinese fishing vessels with 60 people on board in its territorial waters, media reported Saturday.

According to The Star news outlet, the MMEA intercepted the vessels at two different locations east of Johor state in the peninsular part of the country.

Chinese Coast Guard members off Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea. file photo  - Sputnik International
Asia
Twelve People Missing as Fishing Boat Sinks off China's Southeastern Coast, Reports Say

Six captains and 54 crewmen, all Chinese nationals between the ages of 31 and 60 were taken in for trespassing sovereign territorial waters without prior notification or valid permits, The Star reported.

The vessels, registered in Qinhuangdao port of China, may be subject to fines of up to 6 million Malay ringgit (approximately $1.5 million) per boat and 600,000 ringgit per crew member.

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