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Japan to launch coastguard unit for disputed isles
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 29, 2013


Three Chinese ships in disputed island waters: Japan
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 30, 2013 - Three Chinese government ships were in waters around islands at the centre of a dispute with Tokyo on Wednesday, a day after Japan's premier suggested a summit could help mend frayed ties.

Japan's coastguard said the maritime surveillance boats entered waters around a chain of Tokyo-controlled islands known as the Senkakus in Japan, which Beijing calls the Diaoyus, at around noon (0300 GMT).

China has repeatedly sent ships to the area since Japan nationalised some of the chain in September, a move that triggered a diplomatic dispute and huge anti-Japan demonstrations across China.

Beijing has also sent air patrols to the archipelago in the East China Sea, and recently both Beijing and Tokyo have scrambled fighter jets, though there have been no clashes.

On Tuesday, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe suggested a summit with China would improve a relationship that has been badly troubled for months.

"A high-level meeting should be held because there is a problem. If necessary, there might be a need to build the... relationship again, starting with a summit meeting," he told a television show.

Japan's coastguard said Tuesday it would create a special unit comprising 10 new large patrol boats to boost its surveillance of an island chain at the centre of a territorial row with China.

The force, to be completed over three years, will consist of about 600 personnel and include an additional pair of existing helicopter-carrier vessels that are to be refitted, a coastguard spokesman said.

Chinese government ships have regularly circled the Tokyo-administered islands -- known as the Senkakus in Japan and Diaoyus in China -- and entered Japanese territorial waters since Tokyo nationalised some of the chain in September, stoking a flare-up in the long-running sovereignty row.

Japanese patrol boats, mostly from the Japan Coast Guard's Okinawan branch, have tried to chase away the Chinese ships in waters of the East China Sea.

"We see it as necessary to assign large-scale patrol boats specially to cope with the situation in which Chinese government ships have become ever present in waters surrounding the Senkakus," the spokesman said.

Four of the 10 new boats are already under construction. Funding to build the six others was included in an extra government budget approved this month.

About 500 newly hired personnel, to be added between next year and 2016, will join another 100 crew members on the helicopter-carrying boats, the spokesman said.

The new unit is to be based primarily in Okinawa's Ishigaki island, some 175 kilometres (110 miles) southeast of the disputed chain's main island.

The coastguard's Okinawa unit has about 900 personnel.

Diplomat: China underestimated on islands
Bangkok (UPI) Jan 29, 2013 - A former Japanese ambassador said that Tokyo underestimated China's possible reaction on the Senkaku Islands.

Uichiro Niwa, former Japanese ambassador to China, said Japan downplayed China's possible reaction to the announcement that Tokyo would buy the disputed Senkaku island archipelago from is private Japanese owner.

The group of islets is at the center of a bitter territorial dispute.

"The government of Japan transferred ownership from an individual to the state based on its domestic law but once an issue involves crossing waters, it becomes a diplomatic issue," Niwa said in a report in The Bangkok Post.

"I think (Japan) should have taken it more seriously and offered a diplomatic explanation to China. (Prime Minister Yoshihiko) Noda made (Chinese President) Hu Jintao lose face as head of state."

That led to "raging reactions" from Beijing, Niwa said.

"The Japanese side appeared to have underestimated it to a certain degree," he said.

The Senkakus, also known as the Daioyu Islands, are five uninhabited islets and three barren rocks. The archipelago is approximately 120 nautical miles northeast of Taiwan, 200 nautical miles east of the Chinese mainland coast and 200 nautical miles southwest of the Japan's southernmost Ryukyu island of Okinawa.

The largest of the islands is 2 square miles in area but the surrounding waters not only are rich fishing grounds but geological testing has indicated that the seabed could contain valuable minerals and hydrocarbon deposits.

The dispute only really came to the forefront of Chinese-Japanese diplomacy after the rise of China as a military and economic power in recent years. But the issue dates to the 19th century with Japan's 1872 annexation of the Ryukyu archipelago, which includes Okinawa, and its 1895 subsequent annexation of Taiwan.

Former Chinese leader Mao Zedong said the island chain was an issue that was of little importance and could be put off for "later generations."

The territorial dispute threatened to involve the United States in 1996 when a U.S. State Department spokesman refused to say outright whether the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty covered these disputed islands, a position since maintained by the U.S. government urged the two sides to seek a peaceful resolution to their differences.

Heightening the tension between the two nations' assertions to sovereignty are their subsequent claim to an Exclusive Economic Zone under provisions of the Third U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, which came into force in November 1994.

Under UNCLOS III, a nation can claim an EEZ of 200 nautical miles from its coastline.

There remains the possibility that the dispute can be peacefully resolved. Speaking on the sidelines of the annual World Economic Forum in Switzerland, China's envoy to the United Nations in Geneva Liu Zhenmin remarked that Beijing hopes the new government in Tokyo will face up to historical reality "and take the right measures to overcome the difficulty in relations with China, and bring relations back on the track of normal development."

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SUPERPOWERS
China, Japan scholars seek way out in islands row
Washington (AFP) Jan 28, 2013
As fears grow over a simmering island dispute between China and Japan, scholars from both nations are hoping to lower the temperature with expansive talks in Washington in search of common ground. The academics acknowledged that Tokyo and Beijing have major differences over the territories in the East China Sea but they saw one fundamental point in common - neither side wanted the conflict ... read more


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