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China unapologetic after live firing drills off Australian coast

China unapologetic after live firing drills off Australian coast

SYDNEY: Beijing’s ambassador to Canberra said today (Feb 28) he would not apologise for surprise Chinese naval drills near Australia that forced dozens of commercial flights to change course.

Chinesemarinemilitarypolitics
By AFP

Friday 28 February 2025 02:11 PM


The Chinese navy has been busy conducting live firing drills off the coast of Australia and New Zealand in the past week. Photo: AFP

The Chinese navy has been busy conducting live firing drills off the coast of Australia and New Zealand in the past week. Photo: AFP

Some 49 flights were forced to divert last week when three Chinese warships announced live firing drills underneath a busy flight path halfway between Australia and New Zealand.

Both nations have criticised China for staging the drills with little notice - Australian officials said the last-minute alert was broadcast on a channel unused by air controllers.

“In my view, the notice is appropriate,” ambassador Xiao Qian told national broadcaster ABC.

“I don’t see there’s any reason why the Chinese side should feel sorry about that, or even to think about apologising for that.”

Australia and close ally New Zealand have been monitoring the vessels - a frigate, a cruiser and a supply tanker - since they were detected in international waters off Australia last week.

Officials said 49 commercial flights were forced to divert around the live firing zone on Feb 21.

Australia said the drills took place in international waters, and has conceded China’s conduct abided by international law.

“As a major power in this region... it is normal for China to send vessels to different parts of the region to conduct various types of activities,” Xiao said on today.

The warships were moving through an oceanic expanse off Australia’s south coast this morning known as the “Great Australian Bight”, New Zealand’s defence force said.

It added it was ready to “support Australia by providing military assets for further monitoring should the need arise”.