China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own
territory, has complained for the past three years of increased
military pressure from Beijing.
On Saturday, China held a day of drills around Taiwan in an
angry response to brief stop-overs this month in the United
States by Vice President William Lai.
The ministry said that starting about 7 a.m. (2300 GMT), it had
detected 22 Chinese aircraft - fighters, bombers, early warning
aircraft and drones - of which 13 entered Taiwan's "response"
zone, though it did not give details.
Taiwan sent aircraft and ships to monitor them, it said.
Taiwan does not publicise where its "response" zone is, but it
keeps closest watch on the Taiwan Strait, and the area to the
island's south and southwest where Chinese military activity
often is concentrated.
China has not announced further drills around Taiwan since
Saturday, though it frequently mounts such missions without
acknowledging them beforehand or afterwards.
Taiwan's defence ministry this week said it could not judge
whether China's drills that started Saturday had formally ended,
as Beijing did not make any announcement. China has continued
military movements around Taiwan, though on a lesser scale.
The ministry, in a separate statement on Friday morning, said
that during the previous 24 hours it had spotted two Chinese
drones near northern Taiwan.
Both crossed the strait's median line, it said, which had until
last year served as an unofficial barrier between the two sides
but which Chinese aircraft now routinely cross.
One of the drones, identified by the ministry as a BZK-005,
crossed the median line opposite Taiwan's northwest coast, then
flew toward the island's north before flying northeast of
Taiwan.
Taiwan has not reported any Chinese military aircraft in its
territorial air space, though has said planes have come close to
island's contiguous zone, which is 24 nautical miles (44 km) off
its coast.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Tom Hogue and Gerry
Doyle)
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