China plans live-fire exercise in Taiwan Strait by Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) April 12, 2018 China announced plans Thursday to hold live-fire naval drills next week in the narrow strait separating the mainland from Taiwan, an act that could ratchet up tensions with the island. "Live-fire military manoeuvres will take place... in the Taiwan Strait on (Wednesday) April 18, 2018 between 8am and midnight," the maritime safety administration of Fujian, the province that lies opposite Taiwan, said in a statement. China, which sees self-ruled Taiwan as its own territory, has stepped up air and naval patrols around the island since Beijing-sceptic President Tsai Ing-wen came to power in May 2016. She refuses publicly to accept the "One China" formula agreed between Beijing and Taiwan's previous government. Chinese warplanes conducted 25 drills around Taiwan between August 2016 and mid-December last year, according to Taipei. Last month, Beijing flexed its military muscle again as its sole operational aircraft carrier -- the Liaoning -- took part in a huge naval drill with dozens of other vessels in the South China Sea. The show of force emerged days after Taiwan said that the Liaoning and other vessels had passed through the Taiwan Strait on March 20 -- the same day that Chinese President Xi Jinping warned against any attempts to divide China. Taiwan's defence ministry said it would keep a close eye on the exercise. "The defence ministry stresses that the military can comprehensively monitor and respond to the regional situation to ensure national security. We ask the public to rest assured," it said in a statement.
Taiwan stresses Central America ties with navy visit Corinto, Nicaragua (AFP) April 9, 2018 A Taiwanese navy flotilla docked in Nicaragua on Monday in a high-profile visit highlighting ties with Central America and the Caribbean that are shrinking as China presses countries in the region to drop diplomatic relations. The three vessels - described as being on a training mission - powered into Corinto, a port town on Nicaragua's Pacific coast, in a visit "to strengthen the ties of friendship," Nicaraguan officials and Taiwanese diplomats said. Some of the 800 crew members who disembark ... read more
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