Canadian Navy Ships Sailed Through Taiwan Strait Amid Tension With China

Canadian Navy Ships Sailed Through Taiwan Strait Amid Tension With China
Crew members of Her Majestys Canadian Ship (HMCS) Vancouver make preparations shortly after the ship's arrival in Hong Kong's Victoria Harbour on May 3, 2018. (Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images)
Reuters
6/27/2019
Updated:
6/27/2019

BEIJING/OTTAWA–China’s Defense Ministry said on June 27 that Canadian navy ships sailed through the Strait of Taiwan, which separates self-ruled Taiwan from China, an act that could inflame already tense bilateral relations.

Such passages upset China, which claims Taiwan as part of its territory. In April, Beijing condemned a French decision to send a frigate through the Strait as illegal.
China this week blocked all imports of Canadian meat as a diplomatic and trade dispute with Ottawa deepens. China is demanding Canada to release Huawei’s chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou who was arrested last December on a U.S. warrant.

The Canadian defense ministry acknowledged that two of its ships had used the passage last week but denied that Canada was trying to make any kind of political point.

The route taken by the ships was the shortest one between Vietnam—where they had paid a visit–and the seas near North Korea, where Canada is helping stamp out maritime smuggling, the ministry said.

“Transit through the Taiwan Strait is not related to making any statement,” spokeswoman Ashley Lemire said in an email. She noted that a Canadian military vessel had passed through the Strait in October 2018.

A Canadian reporter aboard one of the ships said that at one point, two Chinese fighter jets made a low-level pass within 300 meters (yards) of the two ships. Lemire said she could not immediately confirm the incident.

“The Chinese and Taiwanese forces that were seen nearby during our transit were not unexpected ...nothing in the interaction between vessels or radio communications was unsafe or unprofessional,” she added.