China blamed a US plane for a mid-air collision yesterday that it said had brought down one of its fighters.
"A Chinese aircraft was conducting normal flight operations 10km south of Hainan island when a US plane suddenly veered toward it," state television quoted a Foreign Ministry statement as saying.
"The nose and left wing of the US plane hit the Chinese plane and caused it to crash," the statement said. "China is now searching for the crew."
Earlier, the US Navy said one of its surveillance aircraft had made an emergency landing in the southerly island of Hainan after a mid-air brush with a Chinese fighter on an interception mission.
The 24 crew members on board the EP-3 surveillance plane were not injured, said Colonel John Bratton, a spokesman for the US Pacific Command in Hawaii.
This is the first time a US military plane has made an emergency landing after running into a Chinese aircraft, Bratton said.
The collision appeared to be "an accident" and the Chinese did not force the plane down, he said.
The EP-3 was on a routine mission when it was intercepted by two Chinese fighters at about 9:15am. It had taken off from Kadena Airbase in Okinawa, the US military said.
The US plane was in international airspace, Bratton said.
"The planes actually bumped into each other," said another Pacific Command spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Dewey Ford.
The EP-3, a four-engine propeller plane, issued a Mayday before landing at an airfield on Hainan, the US military said.
Military spokesmen said they didn't know where in Hainan Island the plane was.
Bratton did not know the status of the crew, but he said the Chinese side appeared responsive to US requests that they be well treated and returned. "We see no problems with retrieving the crew," Bratton said.
The US Embassy in Beijing has "communicated our concern about the incident" to the Chinese government, Bratton said. US authorities in Washington have also contacted the Chinese Embassy there.
The US has asked that the crew be well treated and that the aircraft be repaired and allowed to leave.
SECURITY: As China is ‘reshaping’ Hong Kong’s population, Taiwan must raise the eligibility threshold for applications from Hong Kongers, Chiu Chui-cheng said When Hong Kong and Macau citizens apply for residency in Taiwan, it would be under a new category that includes a “national security observation period,” Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) Minister Chiu Chui-cheng (邱垂正) said yesterday. President William Lai (賴清德) on March 13 announced 17 strategies to counter China’s aggression toward Taiwan, including incorporating national security considerations into the review process for residency applications from Hong Kong and Macau citizens. The situation in Hong Kong is constantly changing, Chiu said to media yesterday on the sidelines of the Taipei Technology Run hosted by the Taipei Neihu Technology Park Development Association. With
A US Marine Corps regiment equipped with Naval Strike Missiles (NSM) is set to participate in the upcoming Balikatan 25 exercise in the Luzon Strait, marking the system’s first-ever deployment in the Philippines. US and Philippine officials have separately confirmed that the Navy Marine Expeditionary Ship Interdiction System (NMESIS) — the mobile launch platform for the Naval Strike Missile — would take part in the joint exercise. The missiles are being deployed to “a strategic first island chain chokepoint” in the waters between Taiwan proper and the Philippines, US-based Naval News reported. “The Luzon Strait and Bashi Channel represent a critical access
‘FORM OF PROTEST’: The German Institute Taipei said it was ‘shocked’ to see Nazi symbolism used in connection with political aims as it condemned the incident Sung Chien-liang (宋建樑), who led efforts to recall Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Lee Kun-cheng (李坤城), was released on bail of NT$80,000 yesterday amid an outcry over a Nazi armband he wore to questioning the night before. Sung arrived at the New Taipei City District Prosecutors’ Office for questioning in a recall petition forgery case on Tuesday night wearing a red armband bearing a swastika, carrying a copy of Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf and giving a Nazi salute. Sung left the building at 1:15am without the armband and apparently covering the book with a coat. This is a serious international scandal and Chinese
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE TRAINING: The ministry said 87.5 percent of the apprehended Chinese agents were reported by service members they tried to lure into becoming spies Taiwanese organized crime, illegal money lenders, temples and civic groups are complicit in Beijing’s infiltration of the armed forces, the Ministry of National Defense (MND) said in a report yesterday. Retired service members who had been turned to Beijing’s cause mainly relied on those channels to infiltrate the Taiwanese military, according to the report to be submitted to lawmakers ahead of tomorrow’s hearing on Chinese espionage in the military. Chinese intelligence typically used blackmail, Internet-based communications, bribery or debts to loan sharks to leverage active service personnel to do its bidding, it said. China’s main goals are to collect intelligence, and develop a