Taiwan shoots at Chinese drone after president warns of ‘strong countermeasures’

PENGHU: Taiwan fired warning pictures at a Chinese jingle which buzzed an offshore islet on Tuesday (Aug 30) shortly after President Tsai Ing-wen said she had ordered Taiwan’s military to take “strong countermeasures” against what she termed Chinese language provocations.

It was the first time this kind of warning shots are fired during an amount of heightened tensions in between China and Taiwan. Beijing views the island as its very own territory, while Taiwan strongly disputes China’s sovereignty claims.

The drone headed back to China after the shots were fired, a military spokesperson said.

Taiwan has complained of Chinese drones frequently flying close to small groups of islands this controls near China’s coast as part of military drills by Beijing, most recently by the Kinmen islands.

China and taiwan has conducted workouts around Taiwan right after ALL OF US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited the island this month against Beijing’s wishes.

Kinmen defence command speaker Chang Jung-shun said the live models were fired on the drone which acquired approached Erdan islet just before 6pm nearby time, with flares being used previously. The drone then travelled off back to China and taiwan, he said.

There was no instant response from The far east. On Monday, the Chinese Foreign Ministry had dismissed Taiwan’s complaints about the drones as absolutely nothing “to make a hassle about”.

ALL OF US officials, speaking around the condition of anonymity, said it appeared China was using the drones to harass the Taiwanese rather than escalate the situation.

But they added they were monitoring the situation carefully and were worried about accidents in general.

Footage of at least two drone quests showing Taiwanese troops at their content, and in one case throwing rocks at a drone, have distributed widely on Chinese language social media.

Speaking earlier on Tuesday while visiting the armed forces on the Penghu island destinations, Tsai criticised China for its drone and other “grey zone” warfare activity.

She did not elaborate on which countermeasures she got ordered the defence ministry to take.

“I want to tell everyone that the more the enemy brings about, the more calm we should be, ” Tsai told naval officials. “We will not provoke disputes, and we will exercise self-restraint, but it does not always mean that we will not countertop. ”

The particular Kinmen islands are at their closest point just a few hundred metre distances from Chinese place, opposite China’s Xiamen and Quanzhou metropolitan areas.