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China holds live-fire drills in southeast

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BEIJING: Chinese bombers and spy planes have flown around Taiwan, the air force said on Thursday as Taipei accused Beijing of trying to stoke regional tensions with its military drills. H-6K bombers, Su-30 and J-11 fighters and reconnaissance aircraft took part in a patrol around Taiwan, air force spokesman Shen Jinke told the official Xinhua news agency.


Taiwan’s defence ministry said on Thursday multiple Chinese aircraft including bombers and reconnaissance planes were spotted on Wednesday afternoon flying over Miyako Strait — near Japan’s southern Okinawa island — into the western Pacific before returning to their base via Bashi Channel off southern Taiwan.


Chinese combat helicopters also conducted live-fire drills with missiles off southeast China, state media said, without confirming whether the exercises took place in the sensitive Taiwan Strait. The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) exercise took place on Wednesday and involved various types of helicopters that tested “all-weather operational capability of the air force at sea,” the official Xinhua news agency said.


State broadcaster CCTV showed footage of helicopters firing missiles at distant objects in the water.


The reports did not say exactly where the exercises took place, but they occurred on the same day that China conducted live-fire drills in the Taiwan Strait.


Beijing had announced the Taiwan Strait drills last week.


Vessels had been ordered to avoid a certain area off the Chinese mainland, triggering speculation that a flotilla spearheaded by China’s sole aircraft carrier would take part in the exercise.


But Taiwan’s defence ministry said on Wednesday that the drills only involved land-based artillery conducting “routine” shooting practice.” The drills coincided with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen’s visit to Swaziland, one of Taipei’s few remaining international allies.


Beijing has stepped up military patrols around Taiwan and used diplomatic pressure to isolate it internationally since Tsai took office.


Beijing has also been angered by Washington’s arms sales to Taipei, and China protested last month after President Donald Trump signed a bill allowing top-level US officials to travel to Taiwan. — AFP


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