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China extends flight path over Taiwan Strait by a third time
China announced on Sunday that it had opened a third flight extension along the M503 route. This is located just west of a unofficial dividing boundary in the Taiwan Strait. Taipei reacted by saying this was an "unilateral move" aimed at changing status quo. Last year, China moved the M503 flight route closer to median line. This drew a similar angry response from Taipei. It said that any changes made to the flight routes and their extensions should be communicated and agreed upon in advance by both parties. The W121 extension was opened just days before Taiwan's annual Han Kuang drills, which simulate a Chinese invasion and blockade of its democratic island. China has been flying warplanes over the median line to try to get Taipei, which claims sovereignty in China, to accept Beijing's claim. Civil Aviation Authority of China announced that "in order for the civil aviation to improve the operational efficiency and further optimize the airspace, the W121 line will be used as a connection of the M503 route." In a recent statement, Taiwan's China Policy-making Mainland Affairs Council stated that mainland China had "used unilateral action to change the status quo" and to increase unrest in the region and across Taiwan Strait. The third extension is W123, located to the south of W121. It was opened last year. All three extend west-east from mainland China to Taiwan. The Taiwan Affairs Office of China said that this measure was taken to "ensure flight safety, reduce flight delays and protect the rights and interest of passengers." The opening of the Strait was deemed "beneficial" for both sides. Taipei rejected the explanation, calling it "unjustified". It said that "the number" of international air travelers on the mainland had not recovered to levels before the COVID-19 pandemic. The Han Kuang military exercises will last 10 days. Taiwan is under increased pressure from China who considers Taiwan as their own. (Reporting from Yimou Le in Taipei and Marius Zaharia, Hong Kong; editing by Christian Schmollinger).
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China extends flight path over Taiwan Strait by a third time
China's Civil Aviation Authority said on Sunday that it had opened a third expansion of the M503 route. This flight route has been the subject of complaints by Taipei for many years due to its location just west of a unofficial dividingline in the Taiwan Strait. China moved the M503 route last year closer to the median, provoking an angry response from Taipei. It said Beijing was "packaging" civil aviation to serve political or military purposes, and potentially change the status quo of the Strait. The W121 extension was opened just days before Taiwan's annual Han Kuang drills, which simulate a Chinese invasion and blockade of its democratic island. China has been flying warplanes over the median line to try to get Taipei, which claims sovereignty in China, to accept Beijing's claim. Civil Aviation Authority of China announced that "to further optimize airspace and improve operational efficiency from now on, the civil aviation will use W121 connection lines of the M503 routes." Taiwan's China Policy-making Mainland Affairs Council has not responded to a comment request immediately. The third extension is W123, located to the south of W121. It was opened last year. All three extend west-east from mainland China to Taiwan. The Taiwan Affairs Office of China said that the measure was designed to "ensure flight safety, reduce flight delays and protect the rights and interest of passengers." The opening of the Strait was "beneficial" for both sides. Han Kuang, which will last 10 days, is set to begin on 9 July. Taiwan, facing increased military pressure from China which views the island as its own. (Reporting and editing by Saad Saeed; Additional reporting in Taipei by Yimou Le.
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F-16 escorts aircraft out of the area after airspace violation near Trump's Golf Course
The U.S. military released a statement saying that an F-16 fighter jet intercepted on Saturday a general aviation plane that had violated the temporary restriction placed over the golf club of U.S. president Donald Trump in Bedminster in New Jersey. North American Aerospace Defense Command said that the incident occurred at 2:39 pm (1839 GMT) and marked the fifth unauthorised incursion into the restricted airspace Saturday. The jet's identity was confirmed by a spokesperson. NORAD released a press release stating that the NORAD aircraft performed a headbutt maneuver in order to attract the attention of the civilian pilot. The aircraft was then safely escorted away from the area. The White House did not comment immediately on the incident. NORAD reported several similar incidents over the past few weeks and urges general aviation pilots in that area to review all notifications. (Reporting and editing by Alistair Bell; Reporting by Andrea Shalal)
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Mayor of Moscow: Russian air defences shot down four drones heading for Moscow
The mayor of Moscow said that Russian air defences destroyed four Ukrainian drones heading for Moscow on Saturday. One of the main airports in the capital temporarily stopped outgoing flights. The mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said that emergency services are working on the site of the drones which have fallen but did not give any information about potential damage. In a Telegram report, the Russian Defence Ministry said that air defence units destroyed 48 Ukrainian drones over a five-hour period on Saturday evening. Five drones were in the area surrounding Moscow and two others were heading for the capital. According to the report of the Defence Ministry, the total consisted of 17 drones flying over the Bryansk Region near the Ukrainian border as well as 11 in the adjacent Oryol Region. Belgorod region governor, on the border, said that four Ukrainian drones injured a driver of a bus and a driver of a car. A report from the Defence Ministry stated that 94 drones were destroyed in Russia over night on Saturday, and 45 others within six hours of each other during the day. The Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow reported delays after flights had been temporarily halted. Civil Aviation Authority Rosaviatsiya stated that the measures were taken as a result of "restrictions", over the capital's skyspace, as well as high winds. Rosaviatsiya reported that incoming and departing flights were temporarily halted at airports across Russia, including Pulkovo Airport in St Petersburg, due to safety concerns. (Reporting and editing by Jan Harvey, Diane Craft and Lucy Papachristou)
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Homeland Security reports eight migrants were deported to South Sudan from Djibouti.
The Department of Homeland Security announced on Saturday that the Trump administration deported eight migrants to South Sudan who were held by the U.S. for more than one month at a Djibouti military base. This was after the migrants failed to stop their transfer in a last ditch effort. Two officials at Juba Airport said that an aircraft carrying U.S. citizens deported from the United States arrived in South Sudan Saturday. Unidentified airport staffer said he saw a document that showed the aircraft had "arrived today morning at 6:00am" (0400 GMT). A second immigration official confirmed that the deportees were in the country, but did not provide any further information. He referred all questions to National Security Service. A source from the South Sudanese government said that U.S. officials were at the airport waiting for the arrival of the migrants. The fate of these migrants has become a hot topic in the debate over the legality and effectiveness of Trump's immigration campaign, which involves high-profile deportations of migrants to "third countries", where they claim to be at risk of harm. This issue has been taken to two Supreme Courts. South Sudan is dangerous, even for the locals. U.S. State Department warns Americans not to travel to South Sudan due to violence and armed conflict. The United Nations warned that the African country's current political crisis could rekindle a brutal civil conflict that ended in 2018. Eight men from Cuba, Laos Mexico, Myanmar, Sudan, and Vietnam were deported to South Sudan, according to their attorneys, because it would be a violation of the U.S. Constitution which prohibits cruel or unusual punishment. The Americans had been in custody in Djibouti ever since a Boston federal judge blocked the Trump administration in May from moving them immediately to South Sudan due to concerns about due process. The Supreme Court of Canada on Thursday ruled that additional litigation was necessary following the Supreme Court's ruling. Siding with the Administration Lifting these limits. The courts were closed on July 4th for Independence Day, so two courts heard the emergency requests of the lawyers for migrants on Friday. However, U.S. district judge Brian Murphy said that the Supreme Court's order forced him to deny the request, allowing their deportation. It was not immediately clear where the men were located in South Sudan following their arrival.
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Mayor of Moscow: Russian air defences shot down four drones heading for Moscow
The mayor of Moscow said that Russian air defences destroyed four Ukrainian drones heading for Moscow on Saturday. One of the main airports in the capital temporarily stopped outgoing flights. The mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said that emergency services are working on the site of the drones which have fallen but did not give any information about potential damage. The Defence Ministry reported that 94 drones were destroyed in the air over Russia on Saturday night, and another 45 between 8am MSK (0400 GMT), and 1350 MSK. The Rosaviatsia Aviation Authority in Russia said that Saturday, the outgoing flights from Sheremetyevo Airport were temporarily suspended before being lifted. They cited "restrictions" on the airspace of Moscow as well as high winds. Rosaviatsia reported that incoming and departing flights were temporarily halted at airports across Russia, including Pulkovo Airport in St Petersburg, due to safety concerns. (Reporting and editing by Lucy Papachristou)
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Liverpool players carry red wreaths to Diego Jota funeral
Diogo Jota, a soccer star from Liverpool, died along with his brother, in a car accident on Thursday. On Saturday, his Liverpool teammates, as well as local residents, attended the funeral in a small Portuguese village. Liverpool's captain Virgil Van Dijk and goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher, as well as manager Arne slot, were all present and past teammates who attended the Gondomar service for Andre Silva and the striker. The English Premier League players carried into the chapel two floral tributes, one in the form of a shirt and the other in the colour red. Jota's shirt, worn by Van Dijk, has the number 20 in white flowers. One wore the number 30 worn by Jota, whose brother played in Portugal's 2nd division for FC Penafiel. The teammates entered the church silently, dressed in black with their heads down. The only sound that could be heard was the applause of the crowd. Rute Cardoso arrived with her family. She had married her childhood sweetheart Jota just weeks before the tragic accident. Jota was surrounded by hundreds of Gondomar residents, a small village in northern Portugal, where she grew up. Manuel Linda, Bishop of Porto presided over the private service for close family members and friends. Linda's emotional homily to Jota, his parents, his wife, and their three children said that "solidarity of love is stronger than death". The service was also attended by teammates of the Portuguese national squad, including Bernardo Silva, Bruno Fernandes and both who play in the English Premier League. Jota’s death, at age 28, sent shockwaves through the soccer world and beyond. Condolences poured in from leaders across the country as well as the entire sport. After midnight on Thursday, the brothers' Lamborghini was believed to have veered from the road as they drove to a ferry to Britain. The police suspected that a tyre burst. Reporting by Graham Keeley & Sergio Gonclaves. Mark Potter edited the story.
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Japan braces for more quakes, authorities dismiss doomsday hype
The Japanese government warned on Saturday of the possibility of further strong earthquakes occurring in waters southwest from its main islands. However, it urged people not to be misled by unfounded predictions. Authorities evacuated residents on Friday from islands near the epicenter of a 5.5 magnitude quake that struck off the tip the southernmost island of Kyushu. The quake that occurred on Thursday was strong enough to make it difficult to stand. It was one of over 1,000 tremors that have been recorded in Kagoshima Prefecture islands in the last two weeks. This has fueled rumours that were sparked by a comic-book prediction of a disaster that would strike the country in this month. Ayataka Aybita, Director of the Japan Meteorological Agency’s earthquake and tsunami monitor division, said that it was difficult to predict an earthquake's exact location, time or magnitude with the current scientific knowledge. Ebita said at a press briefing that "we ask people to base their understandings on scientific evidence". Some travellers have avoided Japan because of the manga. The manga has been interpreted by some as a prediction of a catastrophe on Saturday. The latest data shows that arrivals from Hong Kong - where the rumours are widely spread - were down 11% from last May. This year, Japan saw record numbers of visitors. April's record-breaking monthly number of 3.9 millions travellers was a record. Ryo Tatsuki is the artist of the manga "The Future I Saw", which was first published in 1999, and then re-released 2021. In a press release issued by her publisher, she said that she "was not a prophet". Japan is one of the most seismically active countries in the world. About one-fifth (or more) of all earthquakes with a magnitude of 6 or higher occur in Japan. (Reporting and editing by William Mallard in Tokyo, with Tim Kelly reporting from Tokyo)
South Korea to safeguard competition after Korean Air, Asiana merger
South Korea will support smaller sized airlines and display market competitiveness after dominant carrier Korean Air completed a $1.3 billion acquisition of Asiana Airlines on Thursday to create one of Asia's most significant providers.
Korean Air got a 63.88% stake in the nation's. second-largest airline, making it a subsidiary three years later. than Asiana had actually initially anticipated.
The enlarged Korean Air group could account for simply over. half of South Korea's passenger capability, and would become the. world's 12th-largest airline company by international capacity, a. Reuters analysis of airline information from Cirium and OAG programs.
It would rank alongside China's top 3 state-owned. providers as one of the Asia-Pacific region's largest by profits,. according to 2023 financial outcomes.
South Korea's transportation ministry unveiled measures on. Wednesday to boost competitiveness in the domestic aviation. industry, such as extra medium- and long-haul traffic. rights for affordable carriers, the Yonhap news firm stated.
By March, the Fair Trade Commission (FTC) plans to set up. a panel to monitor Korean Air's compliance with conditions. attached to the merger's approval, which it settled on. Wednesday.
The conditions include a pledge by Korean Air not to let. seat numbers fall below 90% of 2019 levels on essential routes, an FTC. file revealed.
Korean Air stated there would not be personnel layoffs.
The combined organisation jobs natural staff development. through service growth, with employees in overlapping. functions being reassigned within the organisation, it stated in. a statement.
The acquisition was obstructed by competition concerns. Korean. Air needed to make substantial concessions around the world,. including handing paths to other airline companies and selling Asiana's. cargo operations, in order to complete the deal.
It is the longest-ever merger of airline companies to be finished,. and was first announced in Nov. 2020 to save debt-laden. Asiana, which was coming to grips with a plunge in need during the. COVID-19 pandemic.
Asiana will be run as a subsidiary for as much as 2 years. before incorporating into one airline company that retains the Korean Air. name, however with brand-new branding.
Korean Air will likewise create a single low-priced provider and. its integration method consists of spreading out flight schedules. on overlapping paths, including brand-new destinations and more security. investments, it stated.
A plan to combine the two airlines' frequent leaflet programmes. will be sent to the FTC by June 2025 for evaluation, Korean Air. stated, including that the merger would reinforce its competitive. position internationally.
The airline company stated the deal intends to improve the capabilities and. network reach of Incheon International Airport, the world's. fourth-busiest for global flights and fifth-busiest for. cargo, which competes with Asian centers Hong Kong and Singapore.
Airline company debt consolidation is rarer in Asia than in Europe, which. has actually seen a wave of mergers in the last twenty years, and in North. America where regulators fear the industry is too concentrated.
Asiana will hold a remarkable basic meeting of. investors on Jan. 16 to select new board directors chosen. by Korean Air.
(source: Reuters)