The Borneo Post

China says its aircraft carrier leaves Taiwan Strait

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BEIJING: China’s sole aircraft carrier sailed out of the Taiwan Strait yesterday morning, a day after Taiwan scrambled fighter jets and navy ships to shadow the carrier group through the narrow waterway separating China from the self-ruled island.

China’s Soviet- built Liaoning aircraft carrier, returning from exercises in the disputed South China Sea, had ‘ meticulous­ly operated’ during the navigation of the Strait, China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy spokesman Liang Yang said.

Taiwan said the carrier group did not pose a threat.

The Taiwan Straits passage and naval drills comes at a time of heightened tension between the two sides, due to Beijing’s suspicion that Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen wants formal independen­ce from China.

Taiwan had said the Chinese ships did not enter its territoria­l waters but did sail into its air defence identifica­tion zone.

China has claimed sovereignt­y over Taiwan since 1949 when Mao Zedong’s Communists drove Chiang Kai-shek’s defeated Nationalis­ts to the island.

Tensions between the two sides have played out in the strait several times since then, including when China conducted military exercises there in 1995 and 1996, prompting the United States to send warships to the waterway.

The Liaoning carrier group, “visiting the South China Sea to conduct cross-maritime region drills and tests, has passed through the Taiwan Strait and continues with its further duties,” Liang said in a short statement on the Defense Ministry’s website.

China has said the Liaoning was on an exercise to test weapons and equipment in the South China Sea and that its movements complied with internatio­nal law.

The latest Chinese exercises have unnerved Beijing’s neighbours given the long-running territoria­l disputes in the South China Sea.

China claims most of the energyrich waters of the South China Sea, through which about 5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year.

Neighbours­Brunei,Malaysia,the Philippine­s, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Duterte and visiting Abe shake hands after a joint statement at the presidenti­al palace in Manila, Philippine­s. — Reuters photo
Duterte and visiting Abe shake hands after a joint statement at the presidenti­al palace in Manila, Philippine­s. — Reuters photo

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