Taiwan again reports Chinese carrier group in Taiwan Strait as election looms

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Chinese aircraft carrier Shandong sails in Pacific Ocean waters, about 300 kms (186 miles) south of Okinawa prefecture, Japan, in this handout image taken by Japan Self-Defence Force on April 5, 2023 and released by the Joint Staff Office of the Defense Ministry of Japan April 6, 2023. Joint Staff Office of the Defense Ministry of Japan/HANDOUT via REUTERS/File Photo

Chinese aircraft carrier Shandong in Pacific Ocean waters in April. The Shandong last transited the Taiwan Strait in early November.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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TAIPEI - Taiwan’s military sent forces to watch a Chinese naval formation, led by the aircraft carrier Shandong, sailing through the Taiwan Strait on Dec 11, Taiwan’s defence ministry said, as Beijing keeps up pressure ahead of elections in January 2024.

The Shandong, commissioned in 2019, last transited the sensitive strait in early November. The latest sailing comes about one month before presidential and parliamentary elections on the island.

The ministry said in a statement that the formation sailed south through the strait but kept to the western side of the waterway’s median line - the Chinese side of the unofficial barrier between the two.

China says the Taiwan Strait is not an international waterway and that it alone has sovereignty there, which both Taiwan and the United States dispute.

Taiwan dispatched “appropriate” forces to keep watch on the formation, the ministry added, without elaborating.

“The security and prosperity of the Indo-Pacific region are closely related to global development and stability, and are obligations and responsibilities that all parties in the region must share,” the ministry said.

Taiwan’s military will “prepare for war without seeking war”, strengthen its self-defence capabilities, and respond to regional threats, it added.

China’s defence ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

During the past four years Taiwan has repeatedly complained of stepped-up Chinese military activity nearby, including fighters and drones crossing the strait’s median line.

Last week, Taiwan

reported a rare night mission by China’s air force over the strait.

Taiwan is on high alert for Chinese activities, both military and political, ahead of its election, especially what Taipei views as Beijing’s efforts to interfere in the ballot to get electors to vote for candidates China may prefer.

Vice-President Lai Ching-te and running mate Hsiao Bi-khim from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party are

leading in the polls.

China views them as separatists and has rebuffed Lai’s offers of talks. REUTERS

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