The countries that border the Baltic Sea should establish joint sea surveillance in the area. It must be done with the fleets of the participating countries.
This is what the Polish Prime Minister, Donald Tusk, is proposing, according to the news agency dpa, ahead of a meeting in Sweden between the heads of government of the Nordic and Baltic countries.
The meeting gets under way while the international focus is on the Chinese ship "Yi Peng 3", which is located in the Kattegat and may have a connection to recent cable breaks in the Baltic Sea.
Tusk refers to the fact that the Baltic Air Policing initiative already exists for airspace.
- I will convince my partners of the necessity to immediately create a similar arrangement - a marine surveillance, says Tusk.
All countries that border the Baltic Sea and feel threatened by Russia can participate in the joint surveillance, he says.
The vessel "Yi Peng 3" has been identified as being of interest in investigations into what happened when cables in the Baltic Sea were broken over a week ago.
Swedish police launched a preliminary investigation into the breaches last week. In this connection, it was said that there may be sabotage. But the cause has not yet been established.
On its way from a Russian port, the Chinese ship passed the two data cables, which were soon found to be broken.
It was Monday last week that it emerged that there had been damage to two data cables. The cables run between Finland and Germany and Sweden and Lithuania, respectively.
Ships from authorities in several countries - including Denmark - are near "Yi Peng 3", which lies quietly outside Danish territorial waters, but in the Danish economic zone.
According to dpa, the Nordic-Baltic summit is the first of its kind among the countries' government leaders since 2017. Poland is taking part for the first time.
The meeting was called before the cable case.
/ritzau/
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