China sends rescue team to Japan
By Jamil Anderlini in Beijing
Published: March 13 2011 13:17 | Last updated: March 13 2011 13:17
A Chinese earthquake rescue team arrived in Tokyo on Sunday as Beijing put aside animosity towards its neighbour and offered sympathy and condolences to the Japanese people and government in the wake of the huge earthquake and tsunami.
The 15-member rescue team, the first such mission ever accepted by Japan from China, will join similar groups from dozens of countries in a search for survivors in the worst affected areas.
Chinese state media reported outpourings of support and sympathy from ordinary Chinese citizens as well as senior officials, including Premier Wen Jiabao, foreign minister Yang Jiechi and defence minister Liang Guanglie, all of whom contacted their counterparts with condolence messages.
But on some websites there was celebration from Chinese citizens delighting at the news of the devastating quake and ensuing tsunami.
On Tiexue, a forum for Chinese nationalists and military fans, users posted pictures of atrocities committed by Japanese soldiers in China during World War II and dozens of posts cheered and expressed regret that the disaster had not killed more Japanese people.
Anti-Japanese sentiment remains high in China, more than six decades after the end of the Japanese occupation, and has been stoked in recent decades by the Communist Partys selective patriotic education curriculum.
After a period of rapprochement in the middle of the last decade Sino-Japanese relations deteriorated again last year after Japan arrested the captain of a Chinese shipping trawler close to a disputed group of islands, prompting an angry outburst and threats from Beijing.
Relations have also been hampered by Beijings enduring support for North Korea and its more assertive stance, especially on territorial disputes in the region.
Earlier this month Japanese media reported that Tokyo was considering an end to its remaining formal Chinese aid programmes, a move that should find support in Japan after China overtook it last year as the worlds second biggest economy.
Since 1979, when the two countries re-established diplomatic ties, Japan has provided a cumulative $40.4bn in soft loans, although it stopped providing these in 2007.
Japan has also provided China with more than $3.6bn in direct aid over that time, with the figure for fiscal 2009 hitting around $55m, according to Japanese media reports.
When Chinas western province of Sichuan was struck by a devastating 8.0-magnitude earthquake in May 2008 a Japanese rescue team was the first international team to arrive on the scene.
In one famous image published in Chinese state media Japanese rescuers were seen paying respect to a body they had recovered from the rubble.
On Sunday flamboyant Chinese tycoon and philanthropist Chen Guangbiao set off for Japan to participate in the rescue operation and donate Rmb1m in cash and emergency medicine, according to state media.
Mr Chen last made headlines when he visited Taiwan in January on a personal mission to hand out $16m in cash to the poor on the island, which Beijing regards as a renegade province to be re-united with the motherland by force if necessary.
Rescue teams from the US, Switzerland and Germany also arrived in the country on Sunday. In total Japan has received offers of help from more than 50 countries as well as the UN who have sent a team to co-ordinate the international rescue operation.
Chinas foreign ministry said there were no reports yet of Chinese casualties from Fridays quake and although the government has been monitoring its coastal areas for radiation, none has yet been detected after an explosion at a nuclear power plant in northern Japan on Saturday.
Additional Reporting by Kathrin Hille