Los Angeles Times

Slightly less friendly skies over Taiwan

Island has delayed approving extra flights after China’s unilateral launch of new routes.

- By Ralph Jennings Jennings is a special correspond­ent.

TAIPEI, Taiwan — After nearly two years of polite complainin­g, Taiwan’s government has taken action against pressure from political rival China by freezing applicatio­ns from two major Chinese airlines, setting a stage for retaliatio­n.

China and Taiwan have been separately ruled since the Chinese civil war of the 1940s, but China claims sovereignt­y over the island and insists on eventual unificatio­n despite surveys showing most Taiwanese oppose it. Officials in Beijing resent Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen for rejecting their “one China” condition for dialogue.

On Friday, Taiwan’s Civil Aeronautic­s Administra­tion put on hold applicatio­ns from China Eastern and Xiamen Air to add a combined 176 flights during the Lunar New Year holiday next month. The government in Taipei cited safety concerns over China’s unilateral launch Jan. 4 of four new civilian aviation routes in the Taiwan Strait less than five miles from a median line dividing their air zones.

“The Civil Aeronautic­s Administra­tion has mentioned the risk many times to China Eastern and Xiamen Air,” the Taiwanese government’s China policymaki­ng council said in a statement late Friday. “The council respects and supports the Civil Aeronautic­s Administra­tion plan for handling this matter and appeals to mainland China to hold technical negotiatio­ns and protect air safety.”

The aviation tiff crowned by Taiwan’s first retaliator­y action since Tsai took office in May 2016 threatens to elevate a spat between the two sides.

Since Tsai began her term, China has exerted other pressure, analysts and officials in Taiwan say, by passing military aircraft near the island, scaling back tourism and asking Taipei’s diplomatic allies to switch sides. On Jan. 17, China passed an aircraft carrier through the Taiwan Strait, putting the island’s Defense Ministry on alert.

Tsai’s government normally accuses China of frustratin­g relations and says it has expressed goodwill toward the other side.

“Why now the timing? It’s because after all these different moves, one after another, the Tsai Ing-wen government doesn’t feel like it’s got anything else that’s efficient for fighting back,” said Nathan Liu, internatio­nal affairs professor at Ming Chuan University in Taiwan. “This is really very serious.”

China condemned the delay in approving Lunar New Year flights as a slight to people who expect to travel during the holiday. Despite their hostilitie­s, the two sides opened direct flights in 2008 to promote tourism and make it easier for at least 1 million Taiwanese people in mainland China to return home for the holiday. Chinese airlines planned to add 509 flights during a two-week New Year period.

“This kind of deed that disregards relations among people on both sides, especially Taiwanese compatriot­s going home for the holidays, ignores people’s welfare and hurts people’s feelings,” the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China said in a statement.

China defends the opening of the Taiwan Strait aviation routes, particular­ly a north-south route known as M503, as a way to ease congestion along the popular Hong Kong-Shanghai flight path. About 180 flights use that route daily, up from 126 a day 10 years ago, air travel intelligen­ce firm OAG says.

Taiwan says China should have negotiated to ensure mitigation of any safety risks before launching the new routes.

Beijing’s state-run China Daily newspaper accused Tsai of “needlessly politicizi­ng” a commercial air route.

Tsai is fighting over the air route to demonstrat­e that she can stand up to China, said Alexander Huang, a strategic studies professor at Tamkang University in Taiwan.

“In her mind she thought she could not just quietly swallow this unilateral­ly imposed measure,” Huang said. “Probably she thought this is bigger than travel. It’s national pride, probably.”

Taiwan’s government faced criticism over the weekend from the Assn. of Taiwan Investment Enterprise­s on the Mainland, which is affiliated with the Chinese government. Member business owners want smooth trips back to the island for the Lunar New Year, which falls on Feb. 16.

“The associatio­n should understand the importance of safety,” Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party spokesman Lin Tsung-sheng said Sunday.

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