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Japan deports pro-China island activists
by Staff Writers
Ishigaki, Japan (AFP) Aug 17, 2012

Senkaku/Diaoyu dispute timeline
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 19, 2012 - Key dates in the dispute over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea, controlled by Japan but also claimed by China and Taiwan:

- 15th-16th centuries: Chinese books, published in 1403 and 1534 during the Ming Dynasty, mention Diaoyu in chronicling journeys through the island area.

- 1895: The Japanese government annexes a group of five uninhabited islands and three rocks as part of Okinawa on January 14 on the grounds that they have never been controlled by any other country.

- 1896: The Japanese government leases the island group to Japanese entrepreneur Tatsushiro Koga. Koga builds plants to process bonito fish and albatross feathers, later employing up to 280 workers.

- 1918: Koga dies and his son Zenji takes over his business.

- 1932: The Japanese government sells four of the islands to Zenji Koga.

- 1940: Koga abandons the business, leaving the islands uninhabited again.

- 1945: Japan surrenders to the US-led allied nations at the end of World War II. The islands remain under US occupation as part of Okinawa until 1972.

- 1949: The People's Republic of China is founded by the Communist Party, with the Nationalists retreating to the island of Taiwan.

- 1969: The UN Economic Commission for Asia and the Pacific reports there may be potential undersea oil reserves in the vicinity of the islands.

- 1971: The governments of China and Taiwan formally declare ownership of the islands.

- 1972: Okinawa is returned to Japanese rule.

- 1972-1985: Koga sells the islands in individual transactions to the Kurihara family, which runs a trading house and owns land throughout Japan.

- 1978: About 100 Chinese fishing boats sail close to the islands. A Japanese nationalist group builds a lighthouse on Uotsuri, one of the islands. (In 2005, the lighthouse is handed over to the Japanese government.)

- 1996: The nationalist group builds another lighthouse on another of the islands. Several activists from Hong Kong dive into waters off the islands on a protest journey. One of them drowns.

- 2002: The Japanese ministry of internal affairs starts renting three of the four Kurihara-owned islands. The other is rented by the defence ministry.

- 2004: A group of Chinese activists lands on one of the disputed islands. The then prime minister Junichiro Koizumi orders their deportation after two days.

- September, 2010: A Chinese fishing boat rams two Japanese coastguard patrol boats off the islands. Its captain is arrested but freed around two weeks later amid a heated diplomatic row that affects trade and political ties.

- April 16, 2012: Tokyo governor Shintaro Ishihara announces he has reached a basic agreement to buy the Kurihara-owned islands.

- July 7, 2012: Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda says his government is considering buying the islands.

- August 15, 2012: Japanese police arrest 14 pro-China activists, five of them on one of the islands.

- August 17, 2012: All 14 are deported.

- August 19, 2012: Japanese nationalists land on the islands without permission.


Japan on Friday deported pro-Beijing activists who had sailed to a disputed island, as Tokyo moved swiftly to put an end to a potentially damaging row with China.

The deportations came just 48 hours after some of the 14 had become the first non-Japanese to set foot on any part of the archipelago since 2004.

Half of the group were put aboard a commercial airliner in the Okinawan main city of Naha and arrived in Hong Kong late Friday.

They walked into the airport arrivals hall waving a Chinese flag and a banner reading "successful landing on Diaoyu Islands" and were greeted by a small crowd of cheering supporters.

"Down with Japanese militarism. Get out of Diaoyu Islands, Japan," they shouted in unison.

The other half were taken back to their boat in the Japanese port of Ishigaki.

An AFP journalist in Ishigaki said the seven arrived by police bus and were taken on board a coastguard boat as Japanese nationalists shouted slogans nearby.

The activists told waiting journalists they were healthy and their boat was in good shape. They were expected to be escorted out of Japanese territorial waters by the coastguard.

Earlier Friday the government's top spokesman had told reporters the prime minister had approved the deportations.

"The prime minister has received detailed reports on the illegal landing," said Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura. "He yesterday decided to approve of the related agencies' final conclusion to deport" the 14 activists.

Fujimura denied the decision had been taken on grounds of political expediency.

"This is not something the government has decided on emotionally. We firmly and strictly responded in accordance with our domestic law," he told a news conference.

Premier Yoshihiko Noda, who had been under pressure to act on an issue that is keenly felt in Beijing, and who has also been dealing with a territorial spat with South Korea, called a special cabinet meeting on Friday.

"It is really regrettable that they entered Japan's territorial waters and illegally landed on Uotsurijima, despite our repeated warnings," he told his ministers, referring to the archipelago's main island.

Noda's move was criticised by Tokyo's nationalist governor Shintaro Ishihara, who has declared his intention to buy the islands from their private owner.

"It is a distinct criminal case," Ishihara told reporters in Tokyo. "We can't call Japan a real law-governed country if it sends them back as mere illegal aliens."

As the group of five activists and two journalists arrived in Hong Kong, activist Tsang Kin-shing lashed out at the Japanese authorities: "Without reason, Japan arrested us on our own territory."

But activist Koo Sze-yiu added: "This time we didn't really succeed, we didn't really win. Diaoyu Islands are still occupied by the Japanese."

The group set off from Hong Kong on Sunday. Five of them were arrested on one of the islands -- known as Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese -- on Wednesday, the 67th anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender.

A commentary on Xinhua, China's official news agency, welcomed the release of the activists but added Japan should drop its plans of "nationalising" the islands.

"Tokyo has made a wise move by releasing all 14 Chinese captured Wednesday on and off the Diaoyu Islands, easing the anguish of millions of Chinese, who, along with the activists, are determined to safeguard China's sovereign rights," the commentary said.

But, it added: "The dispute over the islands will never be settled unless the Japanese government drops its 'island-purchasing' farce."

China's foreign ministry said in a statement earlier Friday Beijing had been pushing for the immediate release of the detainees.

The rapid move to deport the group, which had been widely expected, stands in sharp contrast to the diplomatic calamity of 2010 when Japan held a Chinese trawlerman for two weeks after he rammed coastguard vessels.

Japan was widely criticised as having caved in to Chinese pressure and being forced into releasing the man after Beijing halted high level contacts and stymied trade.

In 2004, when a group of Chinese activists landed on one of the disputed islands, the then prime minister Junichiro Koizumi ordered their expulsion after two days.

The renewed dispute over the islands comes as Japan's relations with South Korea also become increasingly frayed after President Lee Myung-Bak last week visited islets controlled by Seoul but claimed by Tokyo.

si-hih-oh-hg/sr/ia/mb

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Protests build in China over Japan island row
Beijing (AFP) Aug 19, 2012 - Protests broke out in at least six Chinese cities on Sunday as people took to the streets after Japanese nationalists landed on an island claimed by both countries, state media said.

The nationalists raised Japanese flags on Uotsurijima just days after Tokyo deported pro-Beijing protesters who had landed on the island. China had warned against acts "harming" its territorial sovereignty.

More than a hundred people gathered near the complex housing the Japanese consulate in China's southern city of Guangzhou, chanting "Japan get out of the Diaoyu Islands," the official Xinhua news agency said.

In nearby Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong, protesters gathered at an outdoor plaza, waving Chinese flags and shouting slogans, Xinhua said, but did not give the number of participants.

Zhang Pei, one participant, said protesters were marching towards the train station on the border with Hong Kong.

"The demonstration is strung out for seven to eight kilometres (four to five miles). Many police are escorting us along the street," he told AFP by telephone.

He could not give an estimate of the number of protesters, but said participants were swelling as the march continued.

Xinhua said protests also took place in four other cities, including eastern Hangzhou and Qingdao, as well as the northeastern cities of Shenyang and Harbin.

Beijing on Saturday rebuked Japan over the planned island visit.

"China has made solemn representations to Japan, demanding that it immediately cease actions harming China's territorial sovereignty," the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Anti-Japan protests have broken out in several cities in the past week, including the capital Beijing, commercial hub of Shanghai and Qingdao and Binzhou in the eastern province of Shandong, state media and witnesses said.

Disputed isles: claims by Japan and China
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 19, 2012 - Japanese nationalists on Sunday landed on islands controlled by Tokyo but claimed by China, which knows them as Diaoyu, in the latest development in a long-running territorial row.

Here is a brief outline of the governments' competing claims to the archipelago in the East China Sea.

JAPAN

Tokyo says its government began surveying the islands in 1885 and found them unoccupied with "no trace of having been under the control of China".

On January 14 1895 the cabinet decided to erect a marker to formally incorporate the Senkaku Islands into Japanese territory, the foreign ministry says.

"Since then the Senkaku Islands have continuously remained as an integral part of the Nansei Shoto Islands which are the territory of Japan," it says.

Tokyo says the isles were not included in territory Japan renounced under the San Francisco Peace Treaty, which officially ended World War II, and Beijing expressed no objection at the time to their exclusion.

CHINA

China's claims date back to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) when reference to the Diaoyu Islands appeared on maps and in a book during the reign of Yong Le (1403-1424), according to a report by the official news agency Xinhua.

A map published by Japan in the 1780s also appears to prove China's right to the islands, the report said, adding they were undisputed until they were ceded to Japan -- along with Taiwan -- at the end of the 1894-5 Sino-Japanese war.

Xinhua said the islands wrongly remained under Japanese control at the end of World War II when Tokyo relinquished its claim over Taiwan and the Penghu islands.

Taiwan separately claims ownership of the islands.



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