Taiwan detected twenty-six Chinese planes and five ships around the island

Taiwan detected twenty-six Chinese planes and five ships around the island
Taiwan detected twenty-six Chinese planes and five ships around the island

China continues to put Taiwan under pressure. The Taiwanese Ministry of Defense announced on Friday May 3 that it had detected twenty-six Chinese planes and five ships around the island over the last twenty-four hours. These outings took place a few weeks before the inauguration, on May 20, of the new president of Taiwan, Lai Ching-te, whom China considers a dangerous separatist.

Seventeen devices have “crossed the median line [du détroit de Taïwan] and entered (…) Taiwan Air Defense Identification Zone », specifies a press release from the ministry. The median line bisects the Taiwan Strait, a narrow 180-kilometer sea lane separating the self-ruled island from mainland China. Beijing, which does not recognize this line, claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has never renounced the use of force to regain control.

Under President Tsai Ing-wen, elected in 2016, relations between Beijing and Taipei have become strained as she and her government reject China’s claims to the island.

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The new president-elect, Lai Ching-te, like Tsai Ing-wen from the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), won the January presidential elections despite warnings from Beijing that he would lead to “war and decline” from the island.

Tensions with the Philippines

These flights come the day after Manila summoned a senior Chinese representative to protest following a skirmish that damaged two Philippine ships during a patrol in the South China Sea. According to the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs, the Chinese coast guard fired water cannons on two of its ships on April 30, blocking access to a disputed reef in the South China Sea. Beijing, for its part, confirmed that it had “rejected” Philippine boats.

China claims sovereignty over almost the entire South China Sea, an important crossroads of maritime trade routes, to the dismay of several neighboring countries.

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This dispute comes at a time when the United States and the Philippines are organizing joint military exercises, particularly near disputed areas in the South China Sea and the Taiwan Strait. In particular, they are planning a simulation of the recapture of an island by force in the province of Palawan, close to the Spratly Islands disputed by Beijing and Manila.

The World with AFP

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