A map showing islands claimed by both Japan and China. Japan protested to China on Wednesday as a new diplomatic row flared over a remote chain of islands, with Beijing asserting its "indisputable sovereignty" over the uninhabited territories
A Japan coast guard vessel (bottom) monitors a Chinese fisheries boat (top) near the disputed Senkaku or Diaoyu islands in August 2011.Japan protested to China on Wednesday as a new diplomatic row flared over a remote chain of islands, with Beijing asserting its "indisputable sovereignty" over the uninhabited territories
By Adam Plowright | AFP
Japan protested to China on Wednesday as a new diplomatic row flared over a remote chain of islands, with Beijing asserting its "indisputable sovereignty" over the uninhabited territories.
Three Chinese patrol boats approached the islands claimed by Japan in the East China Sea on Wednesday morning, leading Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba to formally complain to his Chinese counterpart during talks in Cambodia.
Gemba "strongly lodged a protest
with the Chinese government with respect to the incident which took
place this morning," a foreign ministry spokeswoman told AFP in Phnom
Penh.
The crews of the vessels, which have since left the islands' immediate vicinity, initially rebuffed Japanese orders to leave.
"We are conducting official duty in Chinese waters. Do not interfere.
Leave China's territorial waters," the crews said, according to the
Japanese coastguard.
The Chinese ambassador in Tokyo was summoned over the alleged
violation, but the Chinese foreign ministry said it did "not accept
Japanese representations over this".
Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi
countered to Gemba that the islands -- known as Senkaku in Japanese and
Diaoyu in Chinese -- "have always been China's territory since ancient
times, over which China has indisputable sovereignty".
The islands lie in rich fishing
grounds and are thought to contain valuable mineral reserves. Tokyo
recognises a private Japanese family as their owner and the city
government has said it plans to buy them.
It is the third time recently that China has clashed with its
immediate neighbours over disputed territory and the row threatens to
overshadow attempts to smooth regional relations at an Asian security
summit in Cambodia this week.
Asked about the incident,
Filipino Foreign Minister Albert del Rosario told reporters: "It looks
like they (China) are becoming more aggressive every day."
The latest increase in friction had "surprised everybody", he said.
The 10 members of Southeast Asian
regional body ASEAN have been trying to agree a long-stalled "code of
conduct" for the disputed South China Sea, home to vital shipping lanes, to help settle overlapping claims.
The Philippines is leading a push
for ASEAN to unite and draw up a code based on a UN law on maritime
boundaries that would delineate the areas belonging to each country.
Beijing is unlikely to accept this, however.
Manila also wants ASEAN to condemn a standoff last month between
Philippine and Chinese ships over Scarborough Shoal, an outcrop in the
South China Sea.
This came as Beijing invited bids
for exploration of oil blocks in waters claimed by Vietnam, which
sparked protests on the streets of Hanoi.
China's assertiveness in the
resource-rich South China Sea is seen by analysts as pushing anxious
neighbouring countries closer to the United States.
The islands at the centre of
Wednesday's dispute triggered a diplomatic crisis in late 2010 when
Japan arrested a Chinese trawlerman who rammed his vessel into two
Japanese patrol boats.
US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton earlier arrived in Cambodia to press for closer relations with
ASEAN as part of Washington's strategy of "pivoting" towards Asia to
challenge China's influence.
A US official said on condition of anonymity that the friction between China and Japan would be discussed during a planned bilateral meeting between Clinton and Yang on Thursday.
1 comment:
Blow the jap off the water.
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