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Taiwan holds live-fire drills as tensions with China mount

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Hualien: Taiwanese troops on Tuesday staged live-fire exercises simulating a response to an invasion, as China stepped up pressure on the island’s President Tsai Ing-Wen and a row over airline routes escalated.


The military sent reconnaissance aircraft to observe simulated incoming ships, and tanks fired rounds as the “enemy” landed at the eastern port of Hualien.


Attack helicopters fired flares and F-16 fighter jets launched simulated assaults, backing up the ground battle against the “enemy” troops — who wore red helmets to differentiate themselves.


The ministry did not specify that the annual drill simulated an invasion by China but said it was intended to “show determination to safeguard peace in the Taiwan Strait and national security”. The Taiwan Strait separates the island from China.


Tsai last month warned against what she called Beijing’s “military expansion” — the increase in Chinese air and naval drills around the island since she came to power in May 2016.


There is also a dispute about new flight routes by Chinese airlines in the strait. Beijing sees self-ruled Taiwan as part of its territory awaiting reunification, by force if necessary.


Cross-strait relations have turned frosty since the inauguration of Tsai, who refuses to acknowledge self-ruling, democratic Taiwan is part of “one China”. The drill on Tuesday takes place annually before the Lunar New Year holiday to raise public confidence in Taiwan’s defence capabilities.


“Our combat-readiness has no holidays,” Huang Kai-Sen, a lieutenant general, said.


“In order for our citizens to feel safe during the Chinese New Year, we are standing by and on guard 24 hours a day.”


Tensions have been growing this month since China began operating new flight routes in the Taiwan Strait without consulting the island.


Taipei slammed the move as reckless and politically motivated, adding it could threaten the island’s security and endanger flight safety.


It has retaliated by blocking requests to operate 176 additional flights between Taiwan and China by two Chinese airlines during the Lunar New Year — the most important holiday for both sides, when tens of thousands of Taiwanese working in China want to travel home.


China Eastern Airlines and Xiamen Air on Tuesday blasted Taipei’s decision as “unreasonable obstruction” for Taiwanese businesspeople and students wanting to return home for the holiday.


China Eastern also said in its statement there was “no so-called safety issues” as all the flight routes it uses had been assessed by experts.


China also sent its aircraft carrier the Liaoning through the Taiwan Strait twice this month.


China’s defence ministry urged Taiwanese not to worry but the voyages were seen as shows of strength by Beijing.


With air fares rising before the Lunar New Year, Taiwan’s transportation ministry said it would try its best to help Taiwanese return home over the holiday.


In addition to direct flights, Taiwanese in China can transit home through places like Hong Kong or Macau, or take ferries from Fujian province to the Taiwan-controlled islands of Kinmen and Matsu and then domestic flights back to Taiwan.


The reduction in the number of flights would be an irritant but most likely wouldn’t cause havoc.


“There will be an impact, but this kind of impact is spread out because we have a few ways to go back, we can go via Hong Kong,” said a man surnamed Yang who works at a Taiwanese business association in the coastal city of Quanzhou on the Chinese side of the Taiwan Strait.


“If someone wants to go home, they can come up with a way.”


— Agencies


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