Australia condemns China for 'unprofessional and unsafe military conduct'
Feb 20, 2022
Canberra [Australia], February 20 : Australia on Saturday condemned China for "unprofessional and unsafe military conduct" after its warship used a laser to "illuminate" an Australian Air Force jet.
Reacting to the incident, Australian Defense Force called it a "serious safety incident" in a statement and said that "Acts like this have the potential to endanger lives," reported CNN.
The incident occurred on Tuesday, the statement said, when an Australian P-8A aircraft, reconnaissance and anti-submarine warfare plane was flying over the Arafura Sea, the body of water between Australia's Northern Territory and the island of New Guinea to the north.
The Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) ship that pointed the laser at the Australian jet was one of two PLAN warships sailing east across the Arafura Sea at the time, the Australian military said, reported CNN.
It released photos of two Chinese ships with the statement, which, according to their hull numbers, are the guided-missile destroyer Hefei and the amphibious transport dock Jinggang Shan.
After the incident, the Chinese ships passed through the Torres Strait into the Coral Sea, the statement said.
The incident is not the first report of Chinese vessels pointing lasers at Australian aircraft. Pilots targeted by laser attacks in the past have reported disorienting flashes, pain, spasms and spots in their vision and even temporary blindness, reported CNN.
"During critical phases of flight when the pilot does not have adequate time to recover, the consequences of laser exposure could be tragic," a US Federal Aviation Administration document said.
In May 2019, Australian pilots said they were targeted multiple times by commercial lasers during missions over the South China Sea.
And in a report in June 2018, US military officials told CNN that there were at least 20 suspected Chinese laser incidents in the eastern Pacific from September 2017 to June 2018, reported CNN.
Military tensions between China and Australia have been on the rise and spiked in November when Canberra said it was entering a pact with the United States and the United Kingdom to acquire nuclear-powered submarines.
The day the sub deal was announced, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said Australia should "seriously consider whether to view China as a partner or a threat."