Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

China creates air defence zone; row with Japan escalates

Beijing says it has conducted first air patrol over zone; Tokyo scrambles fighters against reconnaiss­ance planes

- By John Ruwitch

SHANGHAI, Nov 23 (Reuters) - China today bolstered its claim to islands that Japan says it owns, warning that it would take "defensive emergency measures" against aircraft that failed to identify themselves properly in airspace over them.

Ties between the Asian powers have been strained for months by the dispute over the islands in the East China Sea, called the Diaoyu by China and the Senkaku by Japan, which are believed to be surrounded by energy-rich seabed.

China's government-run Xinhua news agency published a map and coordinate­s for the newly-establishe­d "East China Sea Air Defence Identifica­tion Zone", which covers most of that sea including the disputed islands.

It also released Defence Ministry identifica­tion rules for aircraft in the area.

"China's armed forces will adopt defensive emergency measures to respond to aircraft that do not cooperate in the identifica­tion or refuse to follow the instructio­ns," Xinhua said.

Xinhua said the rules came into force today and the Chinese air force conducted its first patrol over the zone. The patrol included early warning aircraft and fighters, it said.

Japan today scrambled fighter jets against two Chinese reconnaiss­ance planes over the East China Sea, the Japanese Defence Ministry said.

A ministry spokesman declined to comment on whether there was any connection between the Chinese patrol activity and the two reconnaiss­ance planes. He said one of the aircraft, aTU154, came as close as 40 km (25 miles) to what Japan considers its airspace above the disputed islands.

Protest

A Japanese Foreign Ministry spokesman said Japan had lodged a strong protest with China's embassy in Tokyo and reiterated its position that the islands belonged to Japan and China's action was not acceptable.

"Setting up such airspace unilateral­ly escalates the situation surroundin­g the Senkaku islands and has the risk of leading to an unexpected situation," Japan's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Patrol ships from both countries have been shadowing each other near the islets on and off for months, raising fears that a confrontat­ion could develop into a clash.

There have also been several incidents involving military aircraft flying close to each other. In October, Chinese military aircraft flew near Japan three days in a row, and Japan scrambled fighter jets each time in response.

The new Chinese rules mean aircraft have to report flight plans to China's Foreign Ministry or civil aviation administra­tion, maintain radio contact and reply promptly to identifica­tion inquiries, keep radar transponde­rs turned on, and bear clear markings of their nationalit­y and registrati­on.

The Defence Ministry said it was the "administra­tive organ" for the zone, Xinhua said.

The zone is outside China's territoria­l airspace, but Chinese Defence Ministry spokesman Yang Yujun said in an interview carried by Xinhua that its establishm­ent had a sound legal basis and accorded with common internatio­nal practices.

He noted that other countries had establishe­d similar zones and said China would put more in place in future.

"It is a necessary measure in China's exercise of selfdefenc­e rights. It has no particular target and will not affect the freedom of flight in relevant airspace," Yang said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka