China accuses Australia of ‘hyping’ Chinese naval live fire drills

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FILE PHOTO: Chinese Defence Ministry spokesperson Wu Qian attends a press briefing in Beijing, China August 31, 2023. REUTERS/Yew Lun Tian/File Photo

Chinese Defence Ministry spokesperson Wu Qian said China had issued repeated safety notices in advance and that its actions complied with international law.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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BEIJING – Beijing on Feb 23 said Canberra had “deliberately hyped” recent Chinese naval exercises near the Australian coast and confirmed its forces had used live fire in an incident that rattled Australian policymakers.

The authorities in Australia and close ally New Zealand have been monitoring three Chinese navy vessels spotted in recent days in international waters of the nearby Tasman Sea.

Canberra said on Feb 22 it had

not yet received a satisfactory explanation from Beijing

for the Feb 21 drill, which saw the Chinese ships broadcast a live-fire warning that caused commercial planes to change course.

China’s defence ministry hit back on Feb 23, saying the “relevant remarks of the Australian side are completely inconsistent with facts”, while also confirming the use of live ammunition.

“During the period, China organised live-fire training of naval guns toward the sea on the basis of repeatedly issuing prior safety notices,” Mr Wu Qian, a spokesman for the defence ministry, said in a statement. Mr Wu added that China’s actions were “in full compliance with international law and international practices, with no impact on aviation flight safety”.

“Australia, while well aware of this, made unreasonable accusations against China and deliberately hyped it up,” said Mr Wu, adding that Beijing was “astonished and strongly dissatisfied”.

The altercation threatens to complicate the relationship between Beijing and Canberra, which has gradually warmed under Australia’s Labour government.

Ties were derailed nearly a decade ago due to concerns in Australia about Chinese influence in local politics, followed by a 2018 ban on tech giant Huawei from Australia’s 5G network.

Earlier in February, Canberra rebuked Beijing for “unsafe” military conduct, accusing a

Chinese fighter jet of dropping flares

near an Australian air force plane patrolling the South China Sea.

China said at the time that the Australian plane had “deliberately intruded into the airspace around China’s Xisha Islands”, using Beijing’s name for the Paracel Islands, adding that its “measures to expel the aircraft were legitimate, legal, professional and restrained”. AFP

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