Taiwan warns Chinese military drills pose ‘enormous threat’

Chinese military drills pose an “enormous threat” to Taiwan’s security, Taipei warned on Tuesday. (File photo: Reuters)
Updated 26 December 2017
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Taiwan warns Chinese military drills pose ‘enormous threat’

TAIPEI: Frequent and increased Chinese military drills pose an “enormous threat” to Taiwan’s security, Taipei warned on Tuesday in an annual defense review that starkly highlighted rising cross-strait tensions.
China views Taiwan as part of its territory to be reunified at some point — by military force, if necessary.
The two sides split after a civil war in 1949. Although Taiwan is a self-ruling democracy, it has never formally declared independence.
Beijing has stepped up drills around the island since Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen took office last year, as she refuses to acknowledge both sides are part of “one China.”
Local media estimate Chinese warplanes have conducted at least 20 drills around Taiwan this year, compared to just eight in 2016.
The latest known drill took place last week when several Chinese planes, including jet fighters, passed through the Bashi Channel south of Taiwan to the Pacific and back.
The frequent drills “have created enormous threat to security in the Taiwan Strait,” Taiwanese defense minister Feng Shih-kuan said in the 14th national defense report released Tuesday.
The report highlighted the David versus Goliath mismatch between the two rival’s forces, saying Taiwan’s military needed to adapt to a “multiple deterrence strategy” in the face of the fast-growing Chinese army.
The report estimated Chinese troop numbers at two million compared to around 210,000 in Taiwan’s army.
“Taiwan cannot compare with China’s defense budget and military developments,” Feng said in the report.
Instead Taiwan was “seriously reviewing and drawing a plan to develop asymmetric warfare to deter advances by the Chinese military,” he added.
In response to increasing China’s electronic warfare capabilities, Taiwan established its own cyber army command center this year, which currently has around 1,000 people, according to the ministry.
It has also restructured its air force to centralize its anti-aircraft and missile defense command.
Chinese jets also flew over the Sea of Japan (East Sea) earlier this month, prompting South Korea and Japan to scramble jets.
China’s air force said then it was the first time its aircraft had flown through the Tsushima Strait between South Korea and Japan.
Earlier this year, China sent its only aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, through the Taiwan Strait during a drill as a show of strength, but it did not enter Taiwanese waters.


UN experts denounce Switzerland for sentencing students over Gaza protests

Updated 8 sec ago
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UN experts denounce Switzerland for sentencing students over Gaza protests

  • “Peaceful student activism, on and off campus, is part ⁠of students’ rights to freedom of expression and peaceful ‌assembly, and must not be ‍criminalized,” the UN ‍experts said

GENEVA: UN human rights experts said on Tuesday they had protested ​to Switzerland after a group of students was sentenced for trespassing after taking part in pro-Palestinian protests at a Swiss-funded university.
Around 70 students at the Swiss university ETH Zurich took part in a peaceful sit-in in May 2024 ‌as part ‌of student demonstrations in ‌several ⁠cities ​during ‌the Gaza war before being dispersed by police.
Students who took part in the protests were opposing the Swiss facility’s partnerships with Israeli universities, the UN experts said.
“Peaceful student activism, on and off campus, is part ⁠of students’ rights to freedom of expression and peaceful ‌assembly, and must not be ‍criminalized,” the UN ‍experts said, adding that they had written ‍to the Swiss government and the university to raise the issue.
A spokesperson for the Swiss Foreign Ministry confirmed it had received the message ​and that it would respond in due course. An ETH Zurich spokesperson ⁠did not immediately respond.
Five students have so far been sentenced for trespassing, resulting in suspended fines of up to 2,700 Swiss francs ($3,516), legal fees of over 2,000 Swiss francs and a criminal conviction on their records which could discourage future prospective employers, the UN experts said.
Ten others who appealed the charges await sentencing ‌and two others were acquitted, they said.