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Japan to buy islands disputed with China: reports
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 5, 2012

China envoy to visit fortified Taiwan-held island
Taipei (AFP) Sept 5, 2012 - China's chief Taiwan negotiator will travel this month to a former Cold War battleground, Taipei-held Kinmen island off the mainland, a Taiwanese official said Wednesday, in a sign of improving ties.

Chen Yunlin will become the highest-ranking Chinese official ever to visit the battle-scarred island, said Maa Shaw-chang, a spokesman of the quasi-official Taipei-based Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF).

He will travel to Kinmen at the head of a cultural delegation that will tour Taiwan for 10 days from Monday, according to Maa.

Kinmen, within sight of the southeast Chinese city of Xiamen, was the scene of several bloody clashes between China and Taiwan after the two sides split in 1949 at the end of a civil war.

It is one of the most-bombed areas in the world. The Chinese army fired more than 470,000 shells on Kinmen and several other islets in a 44-day bombardment in 1958, killing 618 servicemen and civilians and wounding more than 2,600.

As late as the 1970s, China still bombarded the island, although by then the shells were stuffed with propaganda leaflets. Since then, Kinmen has become a popular attraction for tourists from both sides.

Tensions across the Taiwan Strait have eased since China-friendly Ma Ying-jeou came to power in 2008 on a platform of ramping up trade and tourism links. Ma was re-elected in January for a second and last four-year term.

SEF, which is funded and overseen by the Taiwanese government, handles direct ties with China in the absence of formal relations.


Japan's government has agreed to buy islands at the centre of a territorial row with China, reports said Wednesday, as it tries to both placate nationalists and prevent ties with Beijing deteriorating further.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has been pushed into the deal after a canny move by the right-wing governor of Tokyo who said he wanted to purchase them to protect them from Chinese claims of ownership.

Beijing's response to the reports was muted, with a foreign ministry spokesman saying China was monitoring the situation and would "take necessary measures to defend its national territorial sovereignty".

Tokyo will pay private Japanese landowners 2.05 billion yen ($26 million) for three of the islands, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, the Yomiuri Shimbun and Kyodo News reported, citing unnamed government sources.

Deputy Chief Cabinet secretary Hiroyuki Nagahama met the landowners on Monday and struck the deal, which includes Uotsurijima, the largest in the chain, both outlets said.

Contracts are expected to be signed next week, the Nikkei newspaper said.

At a news conference Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura refused to confirm the reports, but said negotiations were under way.

"We are exchanging views with the landowners in various ways, but that process is ongoing," he said.

"We cannot comment on the contents at all. As a government, we will make a firm announcement after procedures are appropriately completed."

Noda plans to formally tell the Chinese about the purchase on the sidelines of the UN assembly later this month, the Asahi Shimbun said, but a Japan-China summit has not yet been set.

Four of the islands in the remote, but strategically coveted archipelago, are owned by the Kurihara family, who bought them in the 1970s and 80s. The government already owns the fifth.

The original Japanese owner had established factories processing bonito fish and albatross feathers on one of the islands, which were abandoned during World War II and then came under US control until 1972.

The government stepped in with its bid after Tokyo's outspoken nationalist governor, Shintaro Ishihara, took all sides by surprise and announced his intention to buy the archipelago for the metropolitan government.

He charges that the national government, which already leases the four islands it does not own, has not done enough to protect Japanese territory from threats by China.

Ishihara, who gathered millions of dollars of donations towards his purchase plan, had said he wanted to develop the islands and at the weekend sent a team of surveyors to nearby waters.

The government has no plans for any construction on the archipelago in an effort to avoid further friction with China and Taiwan, which also claims the islands, the Asahi said.

Often testy Japan-China ties took a turn for the worse in August when pro-Beijing activists landed on Uotsurijima. They were arrested by Japanese authorities and deported.

Days later about a dozen Japanese nationalists raised their country's flag on the same island, prompting protests in cities across China.

Last week the Japanese ambassador's car was targeted in Beijing when an unidentified man ripped the national flag off the vehicle.

Fujimura told reporters on Wednesday that Japan -- which insists there is no territorial dispute over the islands -- was working towards better ties with Beijing.

"It is true that there are some problems from time to time, but we regard it as a neighbour country with which we will further strengthen our strategic partnership."

Yoshinobu Yamamoto, honorary professor of international politics at the University of Tokyo, said the government's purchase of the Senkakus would make little material difference.

"Practically speaking, there won't be any change in sovereignty if the islands are owned by private individuals, Tokyo or the government," he said. "This is a gesture to display Japan's effective control."

Yamamoto said Japan was stuck between nationalist pressure and an increasingly assertive China.

"Domestically, the decision was obviously caused by Governor Ishihara's move," he said.

"I don't think Japan can find a solution to the territorial dispute. All it can do is to maintain the status quo without enlarging the problem."

The chain, 2,000 kilometres (1,250 miles) from Tokyo, but less than 200 kilometres from Taiwan, lies on vital shipping lanes, and is believed to be near potentially rich gas fields.

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Taiwan vows more patrols in disputed waters
Taipei (AFP) Sept 5, 2012 - Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou on Wednesday pledged to dispatch more coastguard vessels to the disputed waters in the East China Sea, a move that could fuel simmering tensions in the area.

Ma told the coastguards to protect domestic fishermen operating in waters of the Diaoyutai, an island chain known as Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan.

"The duty of the coastguards is to ensure the safety of domestic fishermen and protect their interest," Ma said after hearing a report by Wang Chin-wang, chief of the Coast Guard Administration.

"So the coastguards must not sail there once every few years but every year and every month, even every day during the fishing seasons," he said.

Taiwan's coastguards have had 10 maritime standoffs with their Japanese counterparts in the waters since 2008 after Ma was elected as the president.

"This shows that the government is firm regarding the sovereignty of Diaoyutai," he said, adding that for several hundred years the water area has been a major fishing ground for Taiwanese fishermen.

In the latest incident, in July, coastguard vessels from Taiwan and Japan "bumped into" each other in waters near the disputed island chain as a Taiwanese vessel was escorting activists to the area.

Ma's remarks come as China on Wednesday pledged to take "necessary measures" to defend its territory after Japanese media said Tokyo had agreed to spend 2.05 billion yen ($26 million) for the purchase of the three of the islands from private Japanese landowners.

The islands, also claimed by China and Japan, have sparked a major row between the countries after activists from both sides sailed to the archipelago last month.

Japan arrested 14 activists who sailed to the island from Hong Kong, triggering protests by China and Taiwan, and moved swiftly to deport them.

Days later Japanese activists landed on one of the islands and raised their national flag.

In response Taiwan summoned Japan's representative to protest the trip.

The islands may lie on top of significant oil reserves, and their strategic value is considerable, but according to observers national pride is also a major reason for the acrimony in the dispute.



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Beijing (AFP) Sept 6, 2012
China and the United States stepped back on Wednesday from sparring over the tense South China Sea as the Asian power told Secretary of State Hillary Clinton it would work on a code to manage disputes. China did not budge on its claims on the South China Sea, but both Beijing and Clinton took a conciliatory tone after weeks of escalating tensions in the strategic waters where Southeast Asian ... read more


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