China
has bumped its number of navy and coast guard ships in waters near Taiwan, the
southern Japanese islands, and the East and South China Seas to around 90 over
the weekend. Two-thirds of these ships are believed to be navy vessels. Although not a rare occurrence, this is
China’s largest drill near Taiwan this year.
China
has also taken out seven zones of reserved airspace. As a precaution, Taiwan opted to raise its alert level on Monday Dec
9.
The
temporary reserved areas of airspace are valid from Monday to Wednesday.
However, Taiwan’s ministry of national defence stated that it observed six
aircraft cross the median line of the Taiwan Strait and enter Taiwan’s
southwestern air defence identification zone.
The Taiwan coast guard stated that
the grey zone intrusions carried out by Chinese coast guard ships and the
People’s Liberation Army are “China’s unilateral actions to undermine peace and
stability in the Taiwan Strait region” and that they “undermine cross-strait
exchanges and escalate tensions”.It added that “according to international law and
the United Nations Charter, the Chinese Communist Party has no right to carry
out any intrusion or law enforcement” in Taiwanese waters.
The
Military News Agency of Taiwan reminded commercial cargo ships and fishing
boats sailing in waters near the military drills to be more vigilant and pay
attention to safety.