Bangkok Post

Aussies slam China over intercepti­on

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CANBERRA: Australia yesterday accused the Chinese military of putting an Australian Defence Force flight crew at risk when their plane was intercepte­d late last month over the South China Sea.

Defence Minister Richard Marles revealed a Chinese strike fighter had on May 26 intercepte­d an Australian P-8 surveillan­ce craft, flying close and releasing flares before it accelerate­d and cut in front of the plane.

“At that moment, [the Chinese plane] then released a bundle of chaff which contains small pieces of aluminium, some of which were ingested into the engine of the P-8 aircraft,” Mr Marles told media Sunday.

“Quite obviously, this is very dangerous”.

The crew were unharmed and were able to return to their base, he said, but Australia had conveyed its concerns to Beijing — the first contact the country’s new government has had with the Chinese military since it came to power on May 21.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said it was not unusual for Australia to undertake surveillan­ce in the South China Sea, a region Beijing fiercely contests is its domain entirely, despite a 2016 Hague ruling that dismissed its historic claims.

China’s stance has heightened tensions with the United States and its allies, which insist on freedom of navigation in the area.

Mr Albanese said Australia had acted in “accordance with internatio­nal law, exercising the right to freedom of navigation and overflight in internatio­nal waters, and airspace”.

The incident comes just three months after Australia accused the Chinese military of shining a military-grade laser at one of the country’s defence planes over waters north of Australia. The previous administra­tion labelled the incident “an act of intimidati­on”.

And earlier this month, Canada made a similar accusation, saying Chinese pilots acted unprofessi­onally during recent encounters in internatio­nal airspace.

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