In this Jan. 6, 2016, photo released by China’s Xinhua News Agency, a China Southern Airlines jetliner lands at the airfield on Fiery Cross Reef, known as Yongshu Reef in Chinese, on the Spratly Islands, known as Nansha Islands in Chinese, of the South China Sea. A pair of Chinese civilian jet airliners landed at the newly created island in a disputed section of the South China Sea in a test to see whether its airstrip was up to standards, state media reported on Jan. 7. The China Daily newspaper said the two planes made the two-hour flight to Fiery Cross Reef from Haikou on the southern island province of Hainan. AP

Protests aired as civilian jets land on Chinese-built island

By Christopher Bodeen / The Associated Press

Beijing—Two civilian jets landed on the airstrip of a new island that China built in the South China Sea (West Philippine Sea, drawing more protests over China’s activities in disputed waters. 

The China Daily newspaper reported Thursday the planes made the two-hour flight to Fiery Cross Reef from Haikou on the southern island province of Hainan.

It said the test flights on Wednesday proved the runway’s ability to safely handle large civilian aircraft. Photos showed one of the planes to be a China Southern Airlines Airbus A319-115.

An earlier test flight Saturday drew angry protests from Vietnam, the Philippines and Japan.

China’s building of seven islands by piling sand on reefs and atolls has been condemned by its neighbors, and the United States, which accused China of raising tensions in an area where six governments maintain overlapping maritime territorial claims.

In Manila, visiting British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said freedom of navigation and overflight in the South China Sea was non-negotiable and urged rival governments to avoid provocative steps.

“They are red lines for us,” Hammond said, adding that as a major trading nation, Britain expects to continue exercising those rights.

Vietnamese Foreign Ministry Spokesman Le Hai Binh said in a statement that China’s action seriously violated Vietnam’s sovereignty and demanded China immediately stop and that it respect international law.

Philippines Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario raised a warning that China may next impose an air defense identification zone above the contested region, as it did over the East China Sea, and said such a move would be “unacceptable.”

China has rejected calls for a halt in its island construction, saying its claim of sovereignty over the entire area gives it the right to proceed as it wishes. It says the new islands are principally for civilian use but also help defend Chinese sovereignty.

China’s robust assertions of its claims have sparked tense exchanges, mainly among China, Vietnam and the Philippines, over long-disputed and potentially oil- or gas-rich offshore territories also claimed by Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei Darussalam.

That’s also creating new tensions with the US, which has refused to recognize the new islands as geographic features deserving of territorial waters and other aspects of sovereignty.

While Washington takes no formal position on the various sovereignty claims, it insists that disputes be settled peacefully and that freedom of navigation be maintained in waters through which more than 30 percent of global trade passes.

Fiery Cross Reef is the largest of the seven new islands that in total compose more than 800 hectares (2,000 acres) of reclaimed land. Its 3-kilometer (10,000-foot) airstrip is long enough to handle any plane operated by the Chinese military.

Another runway is being built on Subi Reef, with signs of similar work under way on nearby Mischief Reef. If all are completed, China would possess four airstrips in all on its South China Sea island holdings.

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