China says French ship entered its waters illegally

AP  |  Beijing 

on Thursday said it has complained to after a French warship entered Chinese territorial waters while passing through the Strait this month.

The complaint and Hu's comments appear to illustrate how is now willing to permit assertions of its territorial claims to affect ties with nations from outside the region.

The April 7 incident in the Strait marks a rare case of military friction between the two countries, which have held and rescue exercises before.

said the dispatched ships to identify, warn and escort the French ship and would remain "highly alert to firmly safeguard China's and security." It was not immediately clear whether had responded to the Chinese complaint.

The 160-kilometer (100-mile) -wide Strait divides mainland China from Taiwan, which claims as its territory. It is considered an international waterway heavily trafficked by ships from all nations, many of them bound for Chinese ports.

However, China is highly sensitive to operations by foreign warships near areas it claims, such as the Sea, where it has built military installations atop seven man-made islands.

American allies such as France, and Britain have been increasing their presence in the region, just as the US is stepping up its "freedom of navigation operation" missions near holdings, enraging

In his remarks to Hammond, Hu appeared to reference one such mission by a British warship last August.

At the time, China denounced the passage of the British warship HMS Albion close to Chinese-claimed islands in the Sea's Paracel group, in a development seen as possibly affecting negotiations on a post-Brexit trade agreement between the sides.

"It is regrettable that since August last year the relations between our two countries witnessed some fluctuations because of the Sea issue and a series of institutional dialogues and cooperation projects had to pause," Hu said.

"The issue concerns the and core interests of China and it is highly important and sensitive in relations between China and Britain," he said.

Hammond responded that he shared Hu's "regret that over the last few months there have been some difficulties in advancing the positive course of the relationship that our leaders have set out."

"Of course, you understand that the UK takes no position in relation to the issues in the South China Sea.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, April 25 2019. 22:50 IST