Chinese flights to South China Sea reef threaten air safety: Vietnam

Hanoi accuses Beijing of conducting unannounced flights through its airspace

The alleged ongoing land reclamation by China on Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea is seen in this aerial file photo on May 11, 2015. PHOTO: REUTERS

HANOI (AFP) - Vietnam's civil aviation authority has accused Beijing of threatening regional air safety by conducting unannounced flights through its airspace to a disputed reef in the South China Sea, state media said yesterday.

The Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV) warned that the unannounced flights "threaten the safety of all flights in the region", according to a report in the Tuoi Tre Daily newspaper.

In quotes published in Vietnamese official online newspaper Zing.vn late on Friday, CAAV director Lai Xuan Thanh said a protest letter about the flights had been sent to Beijing, and a complaint dispatched to the United Nations' International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).

"Chinese aircraft have ignored all the rules and norms of the ICAO by not providing any flight plans or maintaining any radio contact with Vietnam's air traffic control centre," he added.

In the seven days to Jan 8, Vietnam logged 46 incidents of Chinese planes flying without warning through airspace monitored by air traffic control in Ho Chi Minh City, according to civilian aviation authorities quoted in the Tuoi Tre Daily.

Chinese state media last Wednesday said two civilian planes landed on an island in the Fiery Cross reef in the contested Spratly Islands, which have long been at the centre of bitter wrangling between Vietnam and its giant neighbour. The two "test flights" on Wednesday followed an initial aircraft landing on Jan 2, which prompted the first formal diplomatic complaint from Hanoi.

The Spratlys are claimed by Hanoi but controlled by Beijing, which has ramped up activity in the area by rapidly building artificial islands, including airstrips said to be capable of hosting military jets.

The recent flights, slammed by Vietnam as a "serious violation" of its sovereignty, have sparked international alarm, with the United States warning last Thursday that the move would raise tensions in the disputed waters. The Philippines has also said it would file a protest.

China asserts ownership over virtually the entire South China Sea, putting it at odds with the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan, all of which stake partial claims. Several of these nations, including Vietnam, have also built facilities on islands they control, but at a significantly slower pace and smaller scale than Beijing.

Rioting broke out in Vietnam after China sent an oil rig into contested waters in 2014, and at least three Chinese people were killed.

Since then, the two sides have tried to mend relations. China's President Xi Jinping visited Hanoi in November last year but that visit also saw anti-Chinese protests.

Vietnamese officials said last week they had asked Beijing to investigate the ramming and sinking of a Vietnamese fishing boat by a suspected Chinese boat.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Sunday Times on January 10, 2016, with the headline Chinese flights to South China Sea reef threaten air safety: Vietnam. Subscribe