Global Times

Chinese planes entitled to fly in intl air zone: ministry

- By Bai Tiantian

China’s foreign ministry on Wednesday slammed Seoul’s accusation that Chinese military aircraft entered South Korea’s air defense identifica­tion zone, asserting the event “conformed with internatio­nal law.”

“Chinese planes conducting flight exercises in internatio­nal airspace conformed with internatio­nal law and internatio­nal practices,” ministry spokesman Lu Kang said Wednesday.

“An air defense identifica­tion zone is not territoria­l airspace. South Korea’s accusation against China based on the socalled air defense identifica­tion zone is groundless.”

A Chinese military aircraft entered the zone for over four hours Tuesday without prior notificati­on, the Yonhap News Agency reported. The plane prompted the South Korean Air Force to scramble fighter jets to monitor its activity, according to the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS). More than 10 planes, including F-15ks and KF-16s, were dispatched, the report said.

The Chinese jet entered the zone about 9:34 am and approached for some 30 nautical miles, or 55.5 kilometers, northwest of Ulleung Island before flying out of the zone about 2:01 pm after a a warning message, Yonhap reported.

The South Korean foreign ministry summoned the Chinese ambassador to lodge a complaint and its defense ministry also called in three Chinese military attaches based in South Korea demanding the incident not be repeated.

By internatio­nal law, foreign military planes enjoy freedom of overflight outside territoria­l airspace, Liu Haiyang, a research fellow from the Collaborat­ive Innovation Center of South China Sea Studies at Nanjing University, told the Global Times. For air defense identifica­tion zones, there are no universal regulatory policies or laws, Liu said.

Xu Yongling, a retired PLA chief test pilot and an expert at the Chinese Society of Aeronautic­s and Astronauti­cs, previously told the Global Times that the PLA Air Force will continue to normalize training and patrol missions in both the East China and South China seas, seeking to enlarge its freedom to conduct military operations and gain more strategic influence in the region.

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