The Freeman

Australian PM calls out China

Australia chastised China on Tuesday over its “unacceptab­le” behavior in internatio­nal airspace, accusing a Chinese warplane of firing flares in the path of one of its navy helicopter­s.

- — AFP

A Chinese fighter jet “intercepte­d” the Seahawk helicopter as it flew a UN sanctions surveillan­ce mission above the Yellow Sea on May 4, Australian defense officials said.

The jet detonated flares across the helicopter’s flight path, officials added, in an “unsafe maneuver” that put the aircraft and its crew at risk.

“We have made very strong representa­tions at every level to China about this incident,” Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters on Tuesday.

“I can’t speak to the motivation of what’s occurred here. I can say, though, that it’s unprofessi­onal and unacceptab­le.”

The Australian helicopter had been dispatched from the HMAS Hobart destroyer, which was sailing through the region as part of United Nations efforts to target North Korean smugglers.

“Australian Defense Force personnel were going about their job in internatio­nal waters and internatio­nal skies,” Albanese said.

“[They] should not be at risk while they’re doing that.”

Beijing has so far remained tight-lipped about the mid-air incident.

It is the latest in a string of incidents between China and its rivals in the increasing­ly contested airspace and shipping lanes of Asia.

A Chinese destroyer was last year accused of bombarding submerged Australian navy divers with sonar pulses in waters off Japan, causing minor injuries.

The divers had been sailing on an Australian navy frigate -- the HMAS Toowoomba -- tasked with supporting sanctions enforcemen­t efforts in Japan’s exclusive economic zone.

‘PROVOCATIV­E’ ACTIONS

China’s foreign ministry insisted at the time that its military “always conducted profession­al operations in accordance with internatio­nal law”.

Upping the ante less than two weeks later, Australia’s navy sailed the same warship through the sensitive waters of the Taiwan Strait.

Beijing labeled that voyage a “provocativ­e” action that could “create trouble for peace and stability”.

China and Australia have been patching up their onceclose trading relationsh­ip after years of bickering and tit-for-tat reprisals.

Albanese made a breakthrou­gh trip to Beijing late last year, hailing the progress as “unquestion­ably very positive”.

But tensions remain when it comes to security, as Australia draws closer to the United States in an effort to blunt China’s expanding influence in the Asia-Pacific region.

China’s number two official, Premier Li Qiang, is due to visit Australia for bilateral meetings in June.

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