Taiwan’s military says it has shot down a drone hovering over one of its island outposts just off the Chinese coast, amid a spike in tensions with Beijing.
The Kinmen Defence Command said the drone entered restricted airspace over Shiyu island just after midday on Thursday.
Flares and warning shots were fired but the drone maintained its position and was shot down, it said in a statement.
It described the drone as being for “civilian use,” but did not say if it had been recovered or what weapon was used to bring it down.
The day before, Taiwan said it warned off drones hovering over three of the islands it occupies off the coast of the Chinese port city of Xiamen.
China claims Taiwan as its own territory, to be annexed by force if necessary. The sides split after a civil war in 1949 and have no official relations, with China cutting off even informal contacts following the election of independence-leaning Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen in 2016.
Despite a lack of formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan, the US is its strongest political backer and source of defensive arms.
Ms Tsai’s administration has pushed for a strengthening of anti-drone defences as part of a 12.9% increase in its Defence Ministry’s annual budget next year. That would boost defence spending by an additional 47.5 billion New Taiwan dollars (£1.34bn), to a total of 415.1 billion NTD (£11.8bn).
The US is also reportedly preparing to approve a $1.1bn defence package for Taiwan that would include anti-ship and air-to-air missiles to be used to repel a potential Chinese invasion attempt.
The US described the Chinese drills last month as a massive overreaction and responded by sailing two guided missile cruisers through the Taiwan Strait, which China has declared to be its sovereign waters.