Here's a new way to exert
influence on a disputed territory: Build your own islands on it.
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Since January, China has
been dragging huge scoops of sand from around a reef in the South China Sea and
piling it into islands that can be seen in satellite photos, the New York Times reports.
The place where they're doing their
building is Mischief Reef, a thin circle of coral that sits between Vietnam,
the Philippines, China, and Taiwan near a group of
islands called the Spratly Islands.
There's just one small
problem: All four of these countries say they own the reef.
Regardless, China has
managed to turn the delicate string of coral into a thick band of land - all in
a matter of weeks. They've even starting constructing shelters on the islands.
Here's an image of Mischief
Reef in January 2012, before any action began:
And another image of the
same area in January of this year, when ships and structures first started to appear:
By March, satellite photos
showed thickened spots of land where the sand had been dragged:
Toward the end of the
month, a pattern of construction became more and more clear:
From a distance, you can
see the work of the dredging boats turning the dark water cloudy as they move
the sand around:
Here you can see a series
of dredging boats working together:
This isn't the first time
China has built islands in the disputed South China Sea.
About 200 miles from
Mischief Reef, at another area called Fiery Cross Reef, the country build a
9,850-foot-long by 985-foot-wide island complete with a docking harbor, the Times reports.
Source: businessinsider