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Anti-Japan protests erupt in China over disputed islands

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Anti-Japan protests erupt in China over disputed islands

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Beijing (CNN) -- Thousands of Chinese protesters hurled bottles and eggs outside the Japanese embassy in Beijing on Saturday amid growing tensions between the two nations over a group of disputed islands.
Waving Chinese national flags and holding portraits of the late Chairman Mao Zedong, the mostly young protesters chanted "down with Japanese imperialism" and called for war as they made their way down the streets under the watchful eyes of police and guards.:D
Elsewhere in China, anti-Japanese rallies broke out in dozens of cities and sometimes turned violent. Messages and photos posted on Chinese social media sites showed angry mobs in numerous cities ransacking Japanese stores and restaurants as well as smashing and burning cars of Japanese make.
Japanese media also reported incidents of assault on Japanese nationals in China in the past few days. A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman insisted Friday that the public anger was not aimed at the Japanese people, whose safety would be protected in China according to law.
Authorities rarely permit protests in China, prompting suspicion that Saturday's nationwide rallies were government-sanctioned. In Beijing, police walking along the demonstrators were seen to ask spectators to join in instead of blocking the street.:rofl:
By Saturday night, China's state-run media had started appealing for restraint, running commentaries that condemned violence and lectured the public on the true meaning of patriotism. In a sign of rising concern over the gathering of large crowds, authorities in cities that had seen the most ferocious protests canceled entertainment and sporting events.
Tensions escalated Friday when Chinese maritime surveillance ships ignored warnings from Japan and briefly entered waters around the group of islands at the center of the heated territorial dispute.
The ships arrived near the uninhabited islands -- which Japan calls Senkaku and China calls Diaoyu -- and began patrols and "law enforcement," China's state-run news agency Xinhua reported.
The islands, situated in the East China Sea between Okinawa and Taiwan, are under Japanese control, but China claims they have been a part of its territory for ages.
The long-running argument over who has sovereignty has triggered protests in both nations.
The United States,a key ally of Japan, has repeatedly urged Tokyo and Beijing to resolve the dispute through dialogue. U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta will meet with his counterparts in Japan and China this weekend, the Department of Defense said Thursday.

Chinese vessels had all left the waters by Friday afternoon and headed north, the Japanese Coast Guard said.
Japan said it will intensify patrols of the area.
See a map of Asia's disputed islands
The controversial Chinese move to begin patrols around the islands follows Japan's purchase of several of the islands from a private owner this week. China described the deal as "illegal and invalid."
Read about China's warning of economic fallout
Animosity between the two countries over the islands runs deep.
They have come to represent what many Chinese see as unfinished business: redressing the impact of the Japanese occupation of large swathes of eastern China during the 1930s and 1940s.
China says its claim goes back hundreds of years. Japan says it saw no trace of Chinese control of the islands in an 1885 survey, so formally recognized them as Japanese sovereign territory in 1895.
Japan then sold the islands in 1932 to descendants of the original settlers. The Japanese surrender at the end of World War II in 1945 only served to cloud the issue further.
The islands were administered by the U.S. occupation force after the war. But in 1972, Washington returned them to Japan as part of its withdrawal from Okinawa.
 
I sympathised with the protesters, only until I saw that some of the idiots were attacking restaurants for having Japanese names and characters. :hitwall:

They're only attacking the livelihood of Chinese anyway, which makes it even more sad.

Fervent nationalism is just as bad as religion in this aspect.

The Chinese government is pretty sly, as it can use this to its advantage, presenting itself as a face of restraint while letting off the steam of the more fired-up protestors.
 
Panasonic, Toyota Report Damages in China as Protests Widen

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A Panasonic Corp. (6752) factory and a Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) dealership in China were damaged by fire as anti-Japanese demonstrations spread across the country, prompting Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda to urge the Chinese government to ensure the safety of its citizens.
Smoke and flames were reported as coming from Panasonic’s electronic-parts plant in eastern Shandong province’s Qingdao city, said Atsushi Hinoki, a Tokyo-based Panasonic spokesman. Keisuke Kirimoto, a Toyota spokesman, said an auto dealership in the same port city was damaged, and the company was checking for losses in other cities.

Tensions between Asia’s two largest economies escalated after Noda’s government said last week his country would purchase disputed islands in the East China Sea from their private Japanese owner, prompting China to dispatch government vessels near the islands known as Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. The row takes place as both countries grapple with a global economic slowdown and China’s Communist Party prepares for a generational leadership change.
More than 10,000 people marched in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. Mass protests were also held in the cities of Harbin, Nanjing, Hohhot, Changchun and Wuhan, with demonstrations largely peaceful and few instances of looting and vandalism, it said.
The protesters said they were responding to calls posted on online forums or Tencent Holdings Ltd. (700)’s messaging service QQ, Xinhua said. In Shenzhen, police used tear gas and water cannons to drive back thousands of anti-Japan protesters occupying a major street, Radio Television Hong Kong reported.
‘Down with Japan Devils’
“I intend to strongly demand that the Chinese government ensure security” of Japanese citizens, Noda said today on public broadcaster NHK’s “Sunday Debate” program. “I strongly object” to the burning of Japanese flags and the protests.
Japan’s Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba returned to Tokyo after cutting short a visit to Australia, while the nation’s new ambassador to China died today after an illness.
In Shanghai, hundreds of riot police separated groups of protesters as they gathered outside the Japanese consulate chanting, “down with Japan devils, boycott Japanese goods, give back Diaoyu.” There were no reports of injuries in the largely peaceful protests.
“Japan is becoming more and more arrogant and the feelings of Chinese are increasingly being oppressed,” said Xiao Feng, 26, an office worker who came to Shanghai to join a few hundred other protesters from Jiangxi province. “We need to step up and make our feelings known that they can’t just have their way.”
Fishing to Resume
Protests occurred in Qingdao, Xi’an, Guangzhou and Hong Kong yesterday as more than 1,000 demonstrators gathered outside the Embassy of Japan in Beijing. Japan’s Kyodo News said more than 40,000 people joined the demonstrations in 20 Chinese cities. Overseas Chinese in Houston and Chicago also protested the Japanese government’s purchase of the islands, Xinhua reported.
Chinese fishermen from Fujian and Zhejiang provinces may resume their activities near disputed islands with Japan today after a three-month seasonal moratorium, China National Radio reported. More than 1,000 fishing boats go there every year, according to CNR.
Activists from Hong Kong plan to sail to the islands on Sept. 18, China National Radio reported on its website yesterday. Japan last month arrested and deported a group that departed from Hong Kong and landed on the islets to assert China’s claim.
Japan’s incoming envoy Shinichi Nishimiya died this morning after an illness, the Foreign Ministry said in an e-mailed statement. Nishimiya was sent to the hospital for an unspecified illness two days after his appointment, the ministry said on Sept. 13.
Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba and Defense Minister Satoshi Morimoto returned to Tokyo yesterday after cutting short a visit to Australia, public broadcaster NHK reported.
 
Since when did china's ccp allowed their citizen to protest !!!???
And police was with them and didn't do anything ??
Now thats called control over your people, media and everything... All hail to ccp party for their virtual protest and thanks to their unpartial and free media for reporting..
 
lol....CCP get it done and then portray it as protest by their citizens......I guess ppl of china would be more interested in their basic rights to have kids, pets , freedom of speech than protesting against some no men’s land being acquired by Japan
 
lol....CCP get it done and then portray it as protest by their citizens......I guess ppl of china would be more interested in their basic rights to have kids, pets , freedom of speech than protesting against some no men’s land being acquired by Japan
It's like a festival for chinese people, because they have finally got chance to protest on the street after many decades..:lol:
Its like one citizen telling other: "Lets go outside our ccp had allowed us to protest, but not against them"
:china:
 
One shouldn't worry too much. For the last two decades China has developed one of the best protestor containment police forces in the world. As long as they know it going to happen and things get out of hands there will be enough polices there with their shields and batons to form walls around the protestors. LOL, the isolated trouble makers don't even know what's going on when they are encircled and handcuffed.
 
China struggles to curb anger as protesters denounce Japan

Shops looted, Japanese factories attacked

* Protests spread over second day, police use tear gas in Shenzhen

* Japan PM says China must protect Japanese citizens, companies

By Michael Martina and Terril Yue Jones

BEIJING/CHENGDU, China, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Chinese police used pepper spray, tear gas and water cannon to break up an anti-Japan protest in southern China on Sunday as demonstrators took to the streets in scores of cities across the country in a long-running row over a group of disputed islands.

The protests erupted in Beijing and many other cities on Saturday, when demonstrators besieged the Japanese embassy, hurling rocks, eggs and bottles and testing police cordons, prompting the Japanese prime minister to call on Beijing to ensure protection of his country's people and property.

In the biggest flare-up on Sunday, police fired about 20 rounds of tear gas and used water cannon and pepper spray to repel thousands occupying a street in the southern city of Shenzhen, near Hong Kong.

Protesters attacked a Japanese department store, grabbed police shields and knocked off their helmets. One protester was seen with blood on his face. At least one policeman was hit with a flowerpot.

Demonstrators have looted shops and attacked Japanese cars and restaurants in at least five Chinese cities. Protesters also broke into a dozen Japanese-run factories in eastern Qingdao on Saturday, according to the Japanese broadcaster NHK.

It added that the protests had spread to at least 72 cities.

"Regrettably, this is a problem concerning the safety of Japanese nationals and Japan-affiliated companies," Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda told a talk show on NHK. "I would like to urge the Chinese government to protect their safety."

The protests, the latest setback in long-troubled relations between Beijing and Tokyo, followed Japan's decision on Tuesday to buy the disputed islands, which Tokyo calls the Senkaku and Beijing calls the Diaoyu and which could contain valuable gas reserves, from a private Japanese owner.

Beijing called that decision a provocative violation of its sovereignty.

China may have unleashed the protests to put pressure on Japan, but the government also risks a backlash from that same public anger ahead of a delicate leadership succession.

Many demonstrators in Beijing held aloft portraits of Mao Zedong, the late revolutionary leader who is still a patriotic icon - but one who can also serve as an implicit rebuke to present-day leaders.

"We think that the government has been too soft and we want to show it what we think," said one 25-year-old protester, salesman Zhang Xin. "I feel disappointed in the government and it doesn't heed our voice."

CALLS FOR WAR

A six-deep cordon of anti-riot police guarded the Japanese embassy in Beijing as demonstrators resumed their protest on Sunday, screaming slogans and insults as they passed by and throwing plastic bottles full of water.

"If Japan does not back down we must go to war. The Chinese people are not afraid," said 19-year-old-student Shao Jingru.

Dissident artist Ai Weiwei, who walked by Sunday's protest in Beijing, told Reuters he believed the demonstrations were sanctioned by the government and the police.

"Chinese citizens need to thank the Japanese government because for the first time, they can mount a large protest on their own land," Ai said. "In China, there are no protests organised by the people."

Police used loud speakers to tell protesters - many of whom were shouting "declare war" - they should respect the law.

In Shanghai, about 1,500 people marched towards the Japanese consulate, where they were allowed to enter cordoned-off areas in small groups.

Police headed off a crowd of at least 2,000 protesters who were trying to charge the U.S. consulate in the southwestern city of Chengdu. Protesters said they wanted the United States "to listen to their voices".

"Do you realise what the Japanese are doing? Why are you beating your fellow Chinese?" Chengdu protesters shouted at the police after some of their number were roughed up.

The Nikkei business newspaper said on Sunday demonstrators had earlier attacked two Panasonic electronic parts plants in the eastern cities of Qingdao and Suzhou. The company will decide whether to continue operations after checking the damage.

Toyota vehicle dealerships were also set on fire and many vehicles were damaged, it said, citing Toyota's China unit.

The flare-up has come while Asia's two biggest economies focus on domestic political pressures, narrowing the room for diplomatic give-and-take. Noda's government faces an election in months, adding pressure on him not to look weak on China.

China's ruling Communist Party is preoccupied with a leadership turnover, with President Hu Jintao due to step down as party leader at a congress that could open as soon as next month.

Chinese state media has praised "rational" expressions of anger but warned that violence could backfire against Beijing. The official Xinhua news agency said in a commentary that the protests were a "reasonable move and natural reaction" to what it called Japan's provocations.

Despite their deepening economic ties, China and Japan have long been at odds over bitter memories of Japan's military aggression in the 1930s and 1940s. Relations chilled in 2010 after Japan arrested a Chinese trawler captain whose boat collided with Japanese coastguard vessels near the islands.

The protests could continue for days yet. On Tuesday, China marks its official Sept. 18 memorial day for Japan's war-time occupation of parts of China.
 
I looked at the islands. They look like large rocks.

I think this is motivated by by Chinese ego.
 
I looked at the islands. They look like large rocks.

I think this is motivated by by Chinese ego.

Ain't just the rocks, but whats underneath the sea as well as for fishing.
 
I looked at the islands. They look like large rocks.

I think this is motivated by by Chinese ego.


It's not called 'ego' but rather national sovereignty or dignity. Let say Canada has a piece of rocky shoal not too far from her coast which historically was hers or at least she perceives to be hers. Somehow that piece of rock was taken out of her hand by an invader who in turn lost its possession to a third party for some reason. Now the third party gifts the rock to the original invade. Shouldn't Canada protests and fights for it or should she just takes it lying down?


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The largest of the three island group: Daioyu/ Senkaku

For China, the resources under the sea are not the priority, but the position of the island is utmost important. All her merchant and blue naval fleets from northern part of the country go through here on the way to Pacific.
 
It's not called 'ego' but rather national sovereignty or dignity. Let say Canada has a piece of rocky shoal not too far from her coast which historically was hers or at least she perceives to be hers. Somehow that piece of rock was taken out of her hand by an invader who in turn lost its possession to a third party for some reason. Now the third party gifts the rock to the original invade. Shouldn't Canada protests and fights for it or should she just takes it lying down?

For China, the resources under the sea are not the priority, but the position of the island is utmost important. All her merchant and blue naval fleets from northern part of the country go through here on the way to Pacific.

Exactly, it's always easy for people like Wright to condemn China. If the same thing happened to Canada he would be defending the sovereignty the same way as the people in China are doing right now. This is called double standards. What does he know about the history relating to Daioyu island anyway before saying it's Chinese ego.

In an interview with a former editor for some Japanese magazine the editor believes the rise of the Chinese Navy plays a very important role that led to the idea of purchasing Daioyu island.
 
A Panasonic Corp. (6752) factory and a Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) dealership in China were damaged by fire as anti-Japanese demonstrations spread across the country, prompting Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda to urge the Chinese government to ensure the safety of its citizens.

China need to rein in any of the event if they want to be a mature player in world stage.

It's hard to imagine to sabotage stores and cars of other's property is a right mood even in such situation.
 
There are issues in this world where it's better for logic and reason to triumph over emotion, and this is one of them...
 
China need to rein in any of the event if they want to be a mature player in world stage.

It's hard to imagine to sabotage stores and cars of other's property is a right mood even in such situation.

Too bad your fellow Pakistanis side with China unconditionally.
 
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