China hits back at US criticism over S. China Sea

Updated 10 August 2015
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China hits back at US criticism over S. China Sea

BEIJING: China hit back on Monday at US criticism that it restricts navigation and overflights in the South China Sea amid a festering marine territorial dispute with some of its neighbors.
China claims most of the South China Sea, through which $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every year. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei have overlapping claims.
Freedom of overflights and navigation doesn’t mean allowing foreign warships and military jets to violate other countries’ sovereignty and security, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement to Reuters on Monday, after US Secretary of State John Kerry accused China of restricting such movements in the region last week.
China sees freedom of navigation in the region as key because it is an important conduit for trade and natural resources, the ministry said.
Kerry told a meeting of regional leaders in Kuala Lumpur last week that China’s construction of facilities on man-made islands for “military purposes” was raising tension and risked “militarization” by other claimant states.


US regulator briefly grounds JetBlue flights after system outage

Updated 58 min 43 sec ago
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US regulator briefly grounds JetBlue flights after system outage

  • Advisory that the ground stop, which was in force for less than an hour, was issued at the airline’s request

WASHINGTON: The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said Tuesday it had lifted a brief order grounding all JetBlue flights, after the airline suffered a system outage.
The FAA said in an advisory that the ground stop, which was in force for less than an hour, was issued at the airline’s request.
JetBlue said a system outage was to blame for its ground stop request.
“A brief system outage has been resolved and we have resumed operations,” the airline told AFP in a statement.
The FAA did not immediately reply to AFP’s request for comment.