A man walks near a large sculpture of the Communist Party flag at the Chinese Communist Party History Exhibition in Beijing, China, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)
China's embassy in Manila confirmed the Chinese army's move on Friday, March 20, to challenge a Philippine aircraft that was spotted in the airspace of the Philippines' Spratly Islands as Beijing found it supposedly intruding into their sovereignty.
Quoting a statement from China's People Liberation Army (PLA)'s spokesman Zhai Sichen, the embassy claimed the Philippines' type C-208 aircraft "illegally intruded into the airspace over waters adjacent to" the Mischief Reef of Spratly Island without supposed approval of the Chinese government.
"The naval and air forces of the PLA Southern Theater Command tracked and monitored the Philippine aircraft, issuing warnings to expel it in accordance with laws and regulations," it said.
For China, the Philippines' act supposedly constituted "a serious violation of China's sovereignty."
The closest feature in Spratly Islands is located 30 to 100 nautical miles from the Philippines and is at least 500 nautical miles from China's southernmost province.
"We hereby solemnly warn the Philippine side to immediately cease all rights violation and provocative acts, and to work together with China to uphold peace and stability in the South China Sea region," it added.