- Source: Hughes Reef
Hughes Reef (Mandarin Chinese: 東門礁/东门礁; pinyin: Dōngmén Jiāo, Vietnamese: đá Tư Nghĩa) is a reef in Union Banks in the Spratly group of islands, South China Sea claimed by the PRC (China), the ROC (Taiwan), the Philippines, Malaysia, and Vietnam. It is only above water at low tide.
The PRC has reclaimed land on the reef, bringing its area to 7.6 hectares, and occupied the reef. The reef has a lighthouse on top of a two storied defence outpost.
Geographical features
On 12 July 2016, the tribunal of the Permanent Court of Arbitration concluded that Hughes Reef is, or in its natural condition was, exposed at low tide and submerged at high tide and, accordingly, its low-tide elevations do not generate an entitlement to a territorial sea, exclusive economic zone or continental shelf.
Military development
In late 2016, photographs emerged which suggested that Hughes Reef has been armed with anti-aircraft weapons and a CIWS missile-defence system.
See also
Great wall of sand
Nine-dotted line
References
External links
Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative Island Tracker
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Karang Hughes
- Karang Penghalang Besar
- Pemutihan karang
- Efek pemanasan global
- Magnesium sulfat
- Angels with Dirty Faces
- Gandu (ikan)
- Daftar perusahaan Amerika Serikat
- Laut
- Anguilla
- Hughes Reef
- Hughes
- Spratly Islands
- List of maritime features in the Spratly Islands
- List of islands in the South China Sea
- Grierson Reef
- Great Wall of Sand
- Scarborough Shoal
- Johnson South Reef
- Great Barrier Reef