Sansha

Sansha (三沙) is a city of the People's Republic of China (PRC) in Hainan Province.[2] The city government's main building was built on Woody Island in the South China Sea.[3]

三沙市
Aerial view of Woody Island.jpg
Location Sansha jurisdiction (in pink) in Hainan
Location Sansha jurisdiction (in pink) in Hainan
Sansha (South China Sea)
Location of the major islands in Sansha
Coordinates: 16°50′03″N 112°20′15″E / 16.83417°N 112.33750°E / 16.83417; 112.33750
CountryChina
ProvinceHainan
Prefecture24 July 2012
City seatWoody Island
(Yongxing Dao)
Government
 • CPC Municipal Party SecretaryFu Zhuang (符戆)
 • MayorA Dong (阿东)
Area
 • Land< 13 km2 (< 5 sq mi)
 • Water~2,000,000 km2 (~772,000 sq mi)
Population
 (2013)[1]
 • Total1,443
Time zoneUTC+8 (China Standard Time)
Postal code
573100
Websitewww.sansha.gov.cn
Territorial Dispute: There are on-going territorial disputes in the entire area covered by the city, whose administrative authority is not internationally recognized.
Sansha
Sansha.svg
"Sansha", as written in Chinese
Chinese
Hanyu Pinyin Sānshā
Postal Map Samsha
Literal meaning three sands (referring to the Chinese names for the three island groups)

History

In 2012, the city was established to administer several uninhabited island groups and undersea atolls in the South China Sea, including the Spratly and Paracel Islands as well as the Macclesfield Bank.[4]

The area of city includes disputed territory not controlled by China.[5]

The city plans to develop virtual economic activity. In early 2013, there were 11 companies that have registered in Sansha. They are paying tax in Sansha.[6]

Timeline

  • 1911: Guangdong Provincial Government of PRC claims the Xisha Islands as part Hainan's Yaxian County[7]
  • 1959: PRC sets up the Guangdong Province administrative office for Xisha, Nansha and Zhongsha islands[7]
  • 1984: Hainan Administrative Region was set up[7]
  • 1988: Hainan Province was set up to take over the administrative office[7]
  • 2012: Sansha City established[7]

Government

The first mayor of the city was elected by a People’s Congress with 45 delegates.[6]

The city has a court of justice and a clinic. A kindergarten and a school are being planned.[6]

Related pages

Sansha Media

References

  1. "三沙概览". sansha.gov.cn. Government of Sansha. Archived from the original on 31 January 2019. Retrieved 13 March 2015. not including the floating population of 2,000 and more; only residents are counted
  2. "US criticises China garrison," Bangkok Post, 4 August 2012; retrieved 2013-4-17.
  3. "New city established on Yongxing Island," "China Daily" (PRC). 24 July 2012; retrieved 2013-4-29.
  4. "China sets up Sansha City to administer South China Sea islands," Sina, 21 June 2012; retrieved 2013-4-17.
  5. Perlez, Jane. "China Sends Troops to Disputed Islands," New York Times, July 24, 2012; retrieved 2013-4-17.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Boehler, Patrick. "Mayor: South China Sea city ‘could become Chinese business hub’," Archived 2013-05-13 at the Wayback Machine Asian Correspondent (UK). March 10, 2013; retrieved 2012-4-23.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 "China's Jurisdiction over the South China Sea," Beijing Review, July 3, 2012;; retrieved 2013-4-17.

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