What's new

China, Japan tensions flare up once again

JAT BALWAN

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Oct 9, 2010
Messages
1,983
Reaction score
0
Country
India
Location
India
The Sino-Japan tensions over disputed islands in East China Sea flared up again as two Chinese maritime vessels have started patrolling the waters around them challenging Tokyo's administrative control, a report said today.



In a surprise move China's State Oceanic Administration (SOA) announced that a maritime surveillance fleet consisting of two patrol vessels, Haijian 50 and Haijian 66 started patrolling the waters of the Diaoyu Islands since Friday.

A Japanese ship which approached them didn't make any contact, but kept following the fleet, state run Global Times reported on Saturday.


Japan [ Images ] has reportedly protested to China over the deployment of patrol vessels asserting that they entered its sovereign waters.


Significantly, China has deployed its largest vessel, the 3,000-ton-class Haijian 50, a heavyweight compared to the more commonly used 1,000-ton-class patrol ships, the daily reported. It is equipped with China's most advanced marine technology and is capable of accommodating the country's Z9A helicopters, it said.


The SOA said that the fleet was still patrolling in the waters near the Diaoyu Islands. "The patrol mission embodies our government's consistent stance on the sovereignty of the Diaoyu Islands," It said.


The sudden move by China to deploy its ships, stated to be first time after December 2008, directly challenging Japanese vessels apparently caught Tokyo by surprise.


The 70 uninhabited islets, believed to be rich with oil and gas were under Japanese administrative control. According reports from Tokyo, the Japanese government had even set up an intelligence room at the prime minister's official residence following the incident.


The Chinese foreign ministry defended the move describing the activities of patrol boats located near the Diaoyu Islands as "lawful."


Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Liu Weimin told a press briefing on Friday that law enforcement vessels patrolled waters close to the Diaoyu Islands in the East China Sea to maintain the normal order and safeguard China's maritime rights and interests.


Liu also reiterated China's stance that the Diaoyu Islands and its adjacent islets have been part of China's territory since ancient times.


The Chinese move followed March 15 indictment of a Chinese trawler skipper whose vessel collided with two Japanese coast guard ships in 2010. He was indicted in absentia by the Japanese.

The Chinese skipper, Zhan Qixiong, 42, was indicted by court-appointed lawyers for wilfully ramming his trawler into one of the Japanese patrol boats as they tried to shoo the vessel away from the disputed Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea on September 7, 2010, Kyodo reported.


Zhan was briefly under arrest, but returned to China and is not expected to stand trial. If the indictment cannot be served within two months, it will be invalidated.


Yang Bojiang, a scholar with the Institute of Japanese Studies under the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, told the Global Times that the incident is the latest sign of aggravated frictions in the East China Sea between Beijing [ Images ] and Tokyo.


"Since 2007, Tokyo has accelerated its pace in making territorial claims and seizing resources in the East China Sea. As a result, Beijing has accordingly upgraded its counter action," Yang noted.


Yang said that the disputes should be settled through negotiations, given that neither Beijing nor Tokyo saw violent conflict as an option to resolve disputes in the East China Sea.

"China has always been open to ironing out the disputes surrounding the Diaoyu Islands through negotiations with Japan," Yang said.


The prerequisite set by Beijing for such negotiations is that Japan must recognise the existence of disputes surrounding the Diaoyu Islands, which it acknowledged in the past but denied after the 1990s.


"The ball is now in Japan's court. Tokyo should adjust its stance over the issue," Yang said.


Earlier this month China released standard names and descriptions of 70 of the isles in retaliation to similar move by Tokyo identifying each of them with names and perimeters



China, Japan tensions flare up once again - Rediff.com India News
 
. .
... and now chinese trollers will come and convert this into an India-related topic. :laugh:

Anyway, it will be interesting to see how this plays out ..... looks like "sudetenland of the 21st century".
 
. .
China should keep up its presence in the area to safeguard its sovereignty. Japan is nothing but a ***** of the west, so it doesn't matter what these Japanese say.

dont insult japan...they are much deserving nation than ur fking rant

dont be so insecure kid

just informing about the habits of 2 cent party:laugh:
 
. .
2 indians with 4 off topic posts```well, it says all..

on topic, neither china and japan will give up the island easily, China has been quite about this island for too long, I see a small conflict is in making
 
.
china is trying to piss everyone off aren't they?

japan should send its own ships in response.... china is trying to muscle control by passive force..

this cannot be allowed to happen or the islands will slip form japans hands

they are japanese islands.... china claims over 80 percent of sth china sea are illegitimate... just because they had it on maps 500 years ago doesnt meant they own it all??... dutch people found and mapped australia first, does australia belong to them??

fact is japan owns the islands.. china needs to take its ego and fk off back to china
 
. .
china is trying to piss everyone off aren't they?

japan should send its own ships in response.... china is trying to muscle control by passive force..

this cannot be allowed to happen or the islands will slip form japans hands

they are japanese islands.... china claims over 80 percent of sth china sea are illegitimate... just because they had it on maps 500 years ago doesnt meant they own it all??... dutch people found and mapped australia first, does australia belong to them??

fact is japan owns the islands.. china needs to take its ego and fk off back to china
please find any source to back up at least, lashing out your stupidity isnt much convincing
 
.
firstly reach the stds of israel or japan in next 100 yrs then write:laugh:

Has your mother india reached that standard, but you're writing, aren't you? You don't want for others what you want for yourself, the freedom to speak. So, that makes you a hypocrite like most of the other indians.
 
. .
please find any source to back up at least, lashing out your stupidity isnt much convincing


source? it is common sense.. just because china has mapped some islands hundreds of years ago , does not mean it owns the island. and just because china mapped the sth china sea so many years ago, does not mean it owns most of that either... it is absurd to think it could..... what it is, is a money grab by china desperate to control resources, china never gave a crap about the islands or the sea for that matter untill resources were found.

you lost all legitimacy once you claimed 80 percent of it all... ridiculous
 
.
please find any source to back up at least, lashing out your stupidity isnt much convincing

oh no dear .... ".. those fickle democracies. weee will just crush thum." :laugh:

there shouldn't be any "minor confict. sudetenland was given away free .....

the bigger question is when is china going to claim that Japan is part of china ..... that's what is going be real interesting. :laugh:
 
.
oh no dear .... ".. those fickle democracies. weee will just crush thum."

there shouldn't be any "minor confict. sudetenland was given away free .....

the bigger question is when is china going to claim the Japan is part of china ..... that's what is going be real interesting. :laugh:
more showing off inferior complexity, i am still waiting for the evidence of that island is 'belong' to Japan, we've heard that indians are good at talking, now im thinking to change it to off-topic ranting
 
.
Back
Top Bottom