May 11, 2025
2 mins read

36 Jets, 8 Ships: China Circles Taiwan Again

Rising tensions as Chinese forces increase activity around Taiwan….reports Asian Lite News

Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defence reported that, as of 6 a.m. Monday (local time), it had detected 36 Chinese military aircraft, eight naval vessels, and two official ships operating near its territory.

The MND said that of the 36 sorties, 17 crossed the median line and entered Taiwan’s northern, central and southwestern ADIZ (Air Defence Identification Zones).

In a post on X, the MND said, “36 PLA aircraft, 8 PLAN vessels and 2 official ships operating around Taiwan were detected up until 6 a.m. (UTC+8) today. 17 out of 36 sorties crossed the median line and entered Taiwan’s northern, central and southwestern ADIZ. We have monitored the situation and responded.”

Taiwan detected five sorties of Chinese aircraft, nine Chinese naval vessels and one official ship operating around its territory as of Sunday 6am (local time).

The MND said that they monitored the situation and responded accordingly.

In a post on X, Taiwan’s MND said, “5 sorties of PLA aircraft, 9 PLAN vessels and 1 official ship operating around Taiwan were detected up until 6 a.m. (UTC+8) today. ROC Armed Forces have monitored the situation and responded accordingly.”

Taiwan’s Council of Indigenous Peoples has criticised a former legislator for echoing “United Front” slogans during an event in China, asserting that Taiwan’s indigenous peoples are not “descendants of the Yellow Emperor,” Taipei Times reported.

The council emphasised that any exchanges involving indigenous communities must be based on mutual respect and equality, without promoting political agendas.

The controversy centres around former Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) legislator and National Dong Hwa University professor Yosi Takun, who recently attended an event hosted by China’s Yunnan Minzu University. During the event, a banner proclaiming “Both sides of the Strait share the same ancestry, Zhonghua spirit, and are one big family” was prominently displayed.

Taiwan’s Council of Indigenous Peoples rejected this narrative, reaffirming that Taiwan’s indigenous peoples are of Austronesian descent, not of Chinese lineage.

“Taiwan’s indigenous peoples are not descendants of the Yellow Emperor,” the council declared, adding that these communities are culturally and linguistically linked to the Austronesian family, not the Sino-Tibetan language family. The council criticised Yosi’s remarks at the event, where he described minority cultures as an “important part of Chinese civilisation.” (ANI)

Previous Story

Baloch Insurgents Claim Wave of Attacks in Pakistan

Next Story

State Salute for Terrorist? Pak Top Brass at LeT Rites

Latest from -Top News

Vance Defends US Sanctions, Tariffs on India

Vance said the Trump administration is making it harder for Moscow to profit from its oil economy through measures that include tariffs on India….reports Asian Lite News US Vice President JD Vance

Bangladesh Rejects Dar’s 1971 Claim

During his two-day Dhaka visit, the first in 13 years, Dar made the claims after meeting interim Foreign Affairs Advisor Hossain…reports Asian Lite News Bangladesh has rejected Pakistani Deputy Prime Minister and
Go toTop

Don't Miss

China intensifies crackdown on celebrity culture

The China Association of Performing Arts published the ninth warning

China’s Xi set to meet Iran’s Raisi at SCO summit

The 22nd Summit of the Council of Heads of the