China’s first operational aircraft carrier Liaoning has arrived in Hong Kong.
Its first trip outside mainland China is part of the events marking the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover from Britain to China. Its follows Xi Jinping’s visit last week, his first as Chinese president.
During his trip, which was marred by protests, he warned that any challenge to the Beijing central government was “impermissible”.
Hong Kong’s political climate has grown tense in recent years with increasing calls for self-determination and even independence.
In 2014, Beijing said it would allow direct election of the city’s leader, but only from a list of pre-approved candidates. That led to mass protests – known as the umbrella demanding universal suffrage.
Mr Xi’s visit to the city came amid tight police security. Following his departure on Saturday, thousands of people marched in an annual event calling from more democracy.
The Liaoning’s presence has been viewed by some as a show of force by Beijing, but many in Hong Kong have also queued for free tickets to tour the ship. It is accompanied by three warships, and will be anchored near Hong Kong’s Tsing Yi island for five days.
The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has been stationed in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover. But it keeps an extremely low profile. PLA soldiers are very rarely, if ever, seen on the streets in uniform. That is why the very public visit of the Liaoning is so significant, just days after the Chinese President Xi Jinping warned the city against independence forces.
China watchers say its very presence is an unprecedented show of military force in rebellious Hong Kong. That it will be open to the public is an additional demonstration of China’s soft power.
The 300m (990ft) aircraft carrier is a refurbished Soviet ship of the Kuznetsov class purchased from Ukraine and was built in the late 1980s. It is part of a larger effort by Beijing to boost its military presence on the global stage.
In April, the country launched another aircraft carrier – its first to be made domestically. It is expected to be operational by 2020. China’s military build-up comes amid rising tensions in the region.
Beijing’s territorial claims in the South China Sea are contested by several of its neighbours and the US regularly conducts what it calls freedom of navigation operations through the resource-rich waters to contest Beijing’s claims.
Tensions have also been heightened by North Korea’s increasingly frequent missile and nuclear tests. On Tuesday North Korea claimed to have tested an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) which some experts believe has the ability to reach Alaska.