Australian PM accuses Chinese warplane of 'unacceptable' conduct

Australian PM accuses Chinese warplane of ‘unacceptable’ conduct

/ 11:39 AM May 07, 2024

Australian PM accuses Chinese warplane of 'unacceptable' conduct

Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks during a National Cabinet meeting at the Commonwealth Parliamentary Offices in Sydney on May 1, 2024. Australia’s prime minister on May 1 declared violence against women a “scourge” and a “national crisis”, after protests in several major cities. FILE PHOTO/Agence France-Presse

SYDNEY — Australia’s prime minister accused Beijing of “unacceptable” conduct Tuesday, following reports a Chinese fighter jet fired flares in the flight path of an Australian navy helicopter over international waters.

The helicopter was flying across the Yellow Sea on May 4 as part of United Nations’ efforts to enforce sanctions on North Korea, Australia’s Defense Department said late Monday evening.

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Defense officials said it was soon “intercepted” by a Chinese warplane, which endangered the helicopter by firing flares across its flight path.

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“We’ve just made it very clear to China that this is unprofessional and that it’s unacceptable,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told Australia’s Nine Network on Tuesday.

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“I think the Australian public would expect some form of explanation about how this could occur.”

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Albanese said Australia’s concerns had been raised through diplomatic and military channels, although Beijing had yet to respond.

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Canberra in November said a Chinese destroyer had injured submerged Australian navy divers by deliberately blasting them with sonar pulses.

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Beijing’s foreign ministry insisted at the time that China’s military “always conducted professional operations in accordance with international law”.

Albanese made a breakthrough trip to China last year, hailing mended trading relations after years of bickering and reprisals.

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But tensions remain when it comes to security, as Australia draws closer to the United States in an effort to blunt China’s expanding influence in the Asia-Pacific region.

TAGS: Australia, China, Military

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