China marks national day with mass air incursion near Taiwan
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[October 01, 2021]
TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwan's air force
scrambled again on Friday to warn away 25 Chinese aircraft that entered
its air defence zone, the defence ministry in Taipei said, the same day
as China marked its national day, the founding of the People's Republic
of China.
Chinese-claimed Taiwan has complained for a year or more of repeated
missions by China's air force near the democratically governed island,
often in the southwestern part of its air defence zone close to the
Taiwan-controlled Pratas Islands.
The latest Chinese mission involved 18 J-16 and four Su-30 fighters plus
two nuclear-capable H-6 bombers and an anti-submarine aircraft, the
Taiwan ministry said.
It said Taiwan sent combat aircraft to warn away the Chinese aircraft,
while missile systems were deployed to monitor them.
The Chinese aircraft all flew in an area close to the Pratas, with the
two bombers flying closest to the atoll, according to a map that the
ministry issued.
There was no immediate comment from China.
The largest incursion to date happened in June, involving 28 Chinese air
force aircraft.
China's latest mission came less than a day after its government
launched a vituperative attack on Taiwan's foreign minister, evoking the
words of revolutionary leader Mao Zedong to denounce him as a
"shrilling" fly for his efforts to promote Taiwan internationally.
Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu, a fluent English speaker, is an
outspoken supporter of the island's efforts to push back against
pressure from China and regularly appears on think-tank and other
panels.
In a lengthy denunciation of Wu late on Thursday, China's Taiwan Affairs
Office said he was a "diehard" supporter of Taiwan independence who
peddled lies that Taiwan is a sovereign country.
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Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu attends a news conference for
foreign journalists in Taipei, Taiwan April 7, 2021. REUTERS/Ann
Wang
It quoted a poem written by Mao in 1963, The River
All Red, which was a denunciation of the Soviet Union and United
States.
"All forms of comments on Taiwan independence are but flies
'humming, with a burst of shrilling and a fit of sobbing,'"
Beijing's Taiwan Affairs Office said.
Taiwan's foreign ministry said the attack was "not worthy" of
commenting on.
However, Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council, which crafts policy on
China, condemned it as "slander and abuse".
"This kind of verbal violence, unprecedented in the international
community, only highlights the overstepping of the rules of the
Taiwan-related body on the other side of the Taiwan Strait and how
far away it is from civilized society."
China has stepped up military and political pressure to try and
force Taiwan to accept Chinese sovereignty.
Taiwan says it is an independent country and will defend its freedom
and democracy.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Mark
Heinrich)
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