China sends ships to islands bought by Japan

About 80 Chinese people gathered in front of the Japanese embassy in Bangkok on Tuesday in protest against the Japanese government's purchase of the disputed Diaoyu islands.

(story continues below)

Photos by Kosol Nakachol

China has dispatched two patrol ships to "assert its sovereignty" over islands at the centre of a row with Japan, state media said Tuesday, as Tokyo completed its purchase of the disputed territory.

The two marine surveillance ships had reached the waters around the Diaoyu islands -- known in Japan as the Senkaku islands -- and would "take actions pending the development of the situation," the Xinhua news agency said.

The arrival came as the Japanese government announced it had completed its planned purchase of the islands, which lie in a strategically important shipping area with valuable mineral resources thought to be nearby.

"This should cause no problem for Japan's ties with other countries and regions," said Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura.

"We have absolutely no desire for any repercussions as far as Japan-China relations are concerned. It is important that we avoid misunderstanding and unforeseen problems," he told reporters.

Beijing had earlier summoned the Japanese ambassador and lodged a strong protest over Tokyo's move to purchase the islands, while vowing to take counter-measures.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said the islands were "an inherent part of China's territory" and vowed his country would "never ever yield an inch" on its sovereignty.

"We have been monitoring the developments of the situation closely and will take necessary measures to uphold China's territorial sovereignty," China's foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters.

Often testy Japan-China ties took a turn for the worse in August when pro-Beijing activists landed on one of the islands.

They were arrested by Japanese authorities and deported. Days later about a dozen Japanese nationalists raised their country's flag on the same island, Uotsurijima, prompting protests in cities across China.

Japan's government currently leases four islands and owns a fifth. It does not allow people to visit and has a policy of not building anything there.

State television and all major Chinese dailies in China Tuesday highlighted Beijing's condemnation of the purchase, in what appeared to be an official effort to stoke patriotic sentiment over the issue.

The islands, which lie around 200 kilometres (125 miles) from Taiwan and 2,000 kilometres from Tokyo, are also claimed by Taipei, which strongly protested the Japanese move on Tuesday.

"We strongly demand that the Japanese government revokes this move," Taiwan's foreign minister Timothy Yang told reporters in Taipei.

"Japan's unilateral and illegal action cannot change the fact that the Republic of China (Taiwan's official name) owns the Diaoyu islands."

Share your thoughts

Discussion 1 : 16/09/2012 at 09:37 PM
No weapal patrol ships to protect fishermans and Sovereign .submitting the basement coordinate to Un and Set aside the tension for Peace is Really the only compromised Way to get this impass. I believe no any countrys will incline this bargain or Japan like war. from iPhone application.
Discussion 2 : 12/09/2012 at 11:44 AM
I lived and worked in China for 3 years and dont believe a thing they say. They are so two faces and its so obvious once you live with them.
Discussion 3 : 12/09/2012 at 08:04 AM
Gao Hong, an expert on Japan studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told Xinhua in an interview on Tuesday that China can use all necessary means to monitor the islands regularly, conduct patrols and offer protection to fishermen. Some people also posted online a Japanese map drawn by the Japanese military in 1876 to prove that the Diaoyu Islands don't belong to Japan. Late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping in the 1970's and 1980's put forward the guideline for solving territorial issues with neighboring countries, which is "laying aside disputes and engaging in joint exploitation." Based on the guideline, China established diplomatic ties with Japan and other neighboring countries, and witnessed decades of sound bilateral relations. China sended ships to the disputed islands The ships had reached waters near the islands - known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China - to "assert the country's sovereignty" from iPhone application.
Discussion 4 : 11/09/2012 at 09:15 PM
China thinks they can take anything they want in the china sea because its call china sea ..euuhhhh they really think they can have everything they also want some island around philipines..whats next vietnam cambodia thailand ????? china goverment and chinesse people r soooo different ...most of chinesse people dont agree with goverment idea and sooner or later they will change ...the young generation ( under 30 years old ) wants big change and they will get it soon....they want peace and respect ...
Discussion 5 : 11/09/2012 at 08:23 PM
D1 ,you are wrong. China is on the wrong side of this and will learn a painful lesson when there is a line up against them economically and militarily over their bully tactics.
Discussion 6 : 11/09/2012 at 06:44 PM
China claims they own the islands, then who sold them to the Japanese?
Discussion 7 : 11/09/2012 at 05:26 PM
Before China became a real power they never cared about the islands. Now that they are a power they want to be the rulers of Asia. All of a sudden they want everything around them. Just wait they will want the Yellow Sea and the Sea of Japan next.
Discussion 8 : 11/09/2012 at 04:41 PM
All these disputed islands and other disputed areas near the poles....there seem to be missing a kind of a World Court that can sort out such matters before it ends in violence....in this case if China wants the island(s) China will take them and there is not much we can do about it.

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