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Apex Aviation confirms China military jet buzzed medevac plane in June

09/11/2025 10:40 PM
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MAC spokesperson Liang Wen-chieh faces a barrage of questions about a PLA aircraft that approached a medical flight near Kinmen’s airspace in June at a regular news briefing on Thursday. CNA photo Sept. 11, 2025
MAC spokesperson Liang Wen-chieh faces a barrage of questions about a PLA aircraft that approached a medical flight near Kinmen’s airspace in June at a regular news briefing on Thursday. CNA photo Sept. 11, 2025

Taipei, Sept. 11 (CNA) Taiwan's Apex Aviation on Thursday confirmed reports that a Chinese military aircraft had flown close to one of its medevac planes near Kinmen in June.

Confirming the first news report of the incident, which was published by the local RW News on Tuesday, Apex told CNA on Thursday that the issue occurred on the morning of June 26, when one of its medevac aircraft was flying from Taipei Songshan Airport to its base in the offshore Kinmen County, carrying no patients.

"As the flight neared Kinmen, the pilots heard the Kaohsiung Approach on the public frequency warning off a People's Liberation Army (PLA) aircraft and ordering it to leave the civilian airway," Apex said, referring to Kaohsiung International Airport's aviation approach procedure.

"The Approach additionally informed our pilots that a fighter jet was flying alongside our plane," the medevac company said.

Apex said it was "difficult to gauge" the distance between its aircraft and the Chinese fighter jet, which was visible to its pilots for about five minutes.

It is unclear how long the fighter jet remained close to the medevac plane, as Apex could not determine precisely when it first approached or departed, the company said.

Apex said its pilots followed air traffic control instructions and encountered "no impediments" during the remainder of the flight to Kinmen Airport. The plane was not carrying any patients at the time, it said.

On the question of why it did not report the incident at the time, APEX said it believed the encounter was coincidental, as it was aware of the news reports that the PLA was conducting "joint combat readiness patrols" that same day.

The RW News reports on Tuesday said that two PLA aircraft -- a JH-7 and a J-10 -- had closed in on an Apex medical evacuation plane in airspace near Kinmen "several months ago."

Later in the day, Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) issued a statement, saying it strongly condemned the CCP's actions and called for a cessation of "such irrational actions," which it said undermine "humanitarian relief and jeopardize flight safety."

"China's military threat against Taiwan is growing by the day, amid frequent military intimidation and gray-zone incursions in the waters and airspace around the Taiwan Strait," the MAC said at the time.

"It has even targeted our medevac aircraft," the council said, adding that such actions show "a disregard for human life."

On Thursday, MAC deputy head and spokesperson Liang Wen-chieh (梁文傑) said at a regular news briefing that the incident was the first of its kind, and the MAC hoped it would not be repeated.

The Kinmen medevac service is a special one designed to address the area's limited medical resources and meet the needs of the county's residents, he said.

Liang, however, did not respond to CNA's questions about why the incident was not reported at the time, or what measure were being taken to prevent a recurrence.

Given the discrepancy between Apex's and the RW News reports on the number of PLA aircaraft, CNA sought clarification from the Air Force on Thursday but did not obtain a clear answer.

"In the face of PLA incursions, the Air Force employs a joint intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance system to maintain full awareness of movements in the waters and airspace around the Taiwan Strait," the Air Force said.

Asked why Taiwanese authorities regarded the incident as a gray-zone incursion rather than a chance encounter with PLA aircraft, the Air Force did not respond directly.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday, Chen Binhua (陳斌華), spokesperson for China's Taiwan Affairs Office (TAO), commented on the MAC's response the previous day, saying that the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) authorities are "accustomed to making an issue of so-called 'gray-zone harassment.'"

The DPP "deliberately hypes up a 'mainland threat' and incites 'anti-China' sentiment" to distract from Taiwanese residents' dissatisfaction with its incompetent governance," Chen said.

(By Sunny Lai)

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