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2015년 10월 9일 금요일

타이완의 킨멘섬: Taiwan's Kinmen Islands, Only a Few Miles From Mainland China

The island of Taiwan, governed by the Republic of China (ROC), lies about 100 miles (161 kilometers) east of mainland China, across the Taiwan Strait. Taiwan also administers a number of smaller islands known as the Kinmen archipelago, or Kinmen County. Great Kinmen Island and its neighbor islets are on the other side of the strait, in a harbor just east of the port city of Xiamen, practically surrounded by the People’s Republic of China (PRC)—in some places barely more than a mile apart. Back in the 1950s, the islands were heavily shelled during the two Taiwan Strait Crises—military clashes between the PRC and ROC. The small islands were heavily fortified against bombardment and invasion, with barricades placed on beaches, artillery emplaced on hillsides, massive tunnels dug to shelter troops, and concrete walls of loudspeakers built to blast propaganda across the water. Reuters reports that today, the island of fewer than 129,000 residents is “eyeing closer commercial ties with China,” wanting to pipe water from Xiamen, and “has plans to build a bridge and set up a glittering free trade zone with the city,” as China continues to seek unification with Taiwan under the “one country, two systems” model practiced in Hong Kong and Macau.
  • The Chintien hall, inside a cavern, is seen inside the Chintien military base in Kinmen County, on November 25, 2008. Kinmen, which means “Golden Door” or “Golden Gate," is a small archipelago of several islands administered by Taiwan and located near Xiamen, China—no more than 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) away. The island was the site of extensive shelling between Communist and Nationalist forces during the first and second Taiwan Straits Crises. The hall was built as a shelter for military commanders to safely give instructions to soldiers during the shelling from the Communists. 
    Nicky Loh / Reuters
  • A woman collects oysters on a beach near anti-landing barricades in Kinmen County, Taiwan, on September 8, 2015. Rustic Kinmen, with a population of less than 129,000, is a half-hour ferry ride from China, but it takes an hour to fly to major Taiwanese cities. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • People walk in the village of Guningtou in Kinmen, Taiwan, on September 7, 2015. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • Shiyu, or Lion Islet, part of Kinmen County, one of Taiwan’s offshore islands, seen in front of Xiamen, China, on September 8, 2015. Just off Kinmen’s shores, glass-walled high-rises wink from the booming mainland port of Xiamen in one of China's most prosperous provinces. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • ROC soldiers operate a U.S.-made 240 mm Howitzer M1 during a military drill in Kinmen on August 22, 2011. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • A soldier from a mine disposal unit stands in front of anti-landing barricades along a coast in Kinmen on May 18, 2009. In 2009, Taiwan removed many of its underwater naval barricades and landmines on beaches in the former military outpost of Kinmen for a cross-strait swimming event. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • A deserted wall of speakers that was used for anti-China propaganda at Beishan Broadcast Station in Kinmen, Taiwan, on September 7, 2015. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • A woman plays cards in her kitchen in the village of Guningtou in Kinmen, Taiwan, on September 7, 2015. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • A farmer sets off firecrackers to scare off birds in a sorghum field in Kinmen County, Taiwan, on September 8, 2015. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • Workers remove anti-landing barricades on Shuangkou Beach in Little Kinmen on July 12, 2009. 
    Nicky Loh / Reuters
  • Wu Tseng-tong, of the Chin Ho-li Knife factory, displays knives he has crafted from recovered artillery shells on August 22, 2011, on the eve of the 53rd anniversary of a massive bombing campaign on Taiwan's Kinmen Island. 
    Wally Santana / AP
  • Wu Tseng-tong grinds knives he's made from recovered artillery shells on Taiwan's Kinmen Island on August 22, 2011. 
    Wally Santana / AP
  • A woman and child rest next to a well in the village of Guningtou in Kinmen, Taiwan, on September 7, 2015. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • An empty military command post in the village of Guningtou, its outer walls riddled with bullet hotels, seen in Kinmen County, Taiwan, on September 7, 2015. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • A warning sign is displayed on territory lined with landmines on Kinmen Island, Taiwan, on May 18, 2009. Tens of thousands of the mines were first planted back in the 1950s, when this Taiwanese beachhead was subjected to frequent Chinese shelling and war was a constant threat. The Taiwanese military has now cleared an estimated96,000 mines concentrated in 154 fields around the island's perimeter. 
    Chiang Ying-ying / AP
  • Zhaishan Tunnel, a mostly-completed shelter built for military boats, now a tourist attraction and occasional concert venue. 
    © Google, Inc.
  • Shards of glass defend frontline pillboxes just 1.8 kilometers (0.7 miles) across from China on Taiwan's Kinmen Island, on August 22, 2011. 
    Wally Santana / AP
  • Local residents take pictures during the annual Han Kuang military exercise in Kinmen, Taiwan, on September 8, 2015. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • Soldiers fire M115 203 mm Howitzers during the annual Han Kuang military exercise in Kinmen, Taiwan, on September 8, 2015. 
    Pichi Chuang / Reuters
  • Aging barricades still sit on a beach on a northwestern shore of Kinmen, 
    © Google, Inc.
  • A low-tide walkway connects Kinmen to Jiangong Island, once known as “Exile Island” and rumored to have housed a leper colony, and now home to abandoned fortifications and a large statue of Koxinga, a Chinese military leader who ended decades of Dutch rule of Taiwan Island in 1662.
    © Google, Inc.

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