China holds live-fire drills opposite Taiwan, a week after large-scale exercise
Taiwan’s Defence Ministry said China’s drills were part of an annual exercise and was tracking them.
China is staging live-fire drills off the coast of its southern Fujian province facing Taiwan.
The drills come just a week after a massive air-and-sea drill held as a so-called punishment for Taiwan’s president rejecting Beijing’s claims of sovereignty.
The live fire drills were being held near the Pingtan islands, according to a notice from the Maritime Safety Administration.
It warned ships to avoid the area but did not offer additional details.
Taiwan’s Defence Ministry said China’s drills were part of an annual exercise and was tracking them.
“It cannot be ruled out that it is one of the ways to expand the deterrent effect in line with the dynamics in the Taiwan Strait,” the statement said.
Taiwan is a self-ruled island that Beijing claims is part of China. Tensions around the issue have flared in recent years.
China has increased its presence in the waters and skies around Taiwan. It now increasingly sends large amounts of warplanes and navy vessels to military exercises near Taiwan and its coast guard carries out patrols.
Last week, China held a one-day military exercise aimed at practising the “sealing off of key ports and key areas”.
Taiwan counted a record one-day total of 153 aircraft, 14 navy vessels, and 12 Chinese government ships.
In response to Chinese moves, the US has continued to host what it calls “freedom of navigation” transits through the Taiwan Strait.
On Sunday, the destroyer USS Higgins and the Canadian frigate HMCS Vancouver transited the narrow band of ocean that separates China and Taiwan.
Germany sent two warships through the Taiwan Strait last month as it seeks to increase its defence engagement in the Asia-Pacific region.