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New Zealand defends military patrol flight near China

By Thomson Reuters Apr 18, 2026 | 12:13 AM

April 18 (Reuters) – New Zealand on Saturday defended the actions of a military patrol aircraft flight near China after Beijing ​said it had undermined its security ‌interests.

China’s foreign ministry said on Friday that a New Zealand P-8A patrol aircraft had “conducted continuous close-in reconnaissance and harassment in the airspace and waters of the ‌Yellow ​Sea and East China ⁠Sea”.

“The action undermined China’s ⁠security interests, increased risks of misunderstanding and miscalculation, and gravely disrupted the order of civil aviation,” spokesperson Guo Jiakun said, according to ​an official transcript.

Responding to the claim, the New Zealand Defence Force said a Royal ⁠New Zealand Air Force ⁠aircraft “has been undertaking activities that monitor ​North Korean sanctions evasions at sea in North ​Asia under UN Security Council resolutions”.

“The New ‌Zealand Defence Force crew operated professionally and in accordance with international law and civil aviation procedures for the region,” it said in ⁠a statement. “We have made it clear that this is a longstanding deployment enforcing UN-mandated sanctions on North ⁠Korea.”

Relations between ‌the two countries became strained ⁠in February last year after Chinese ​navy ‌vessels conducted live-fire exercises in ​the Tasman ⁠Sea close to New Zealand. In June, the nations’ leaders met in New Zealand where they discussed the role of trade in boosting ties.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; Editing by ​William Mallard)