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US urges 'cooler heads' to preserve Asia's stability
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Sept 27, 2012

Japan 'stole' our islands: China tells UN
United Nations (AFP) Sept 27, 2012 - China's Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi sparked angry exchanges with Japanese diplomats at the United Nations on Thursday by accusing Japan of stealing disputed islands.

Chinese and Japanese envoys staged a series of attacks after Yang heightened tensions over the East China Sea islands and reopened old diplomatic wounds over World War II.

The Japanese government's purchase of the uninhabited islands from a private owner this month has infuriated Beijing and set off violent protests in several Chinese cities.

"China strongly urges Japan to immediately stop all activities that violate China's territorial sovereignty, take concrete actions to correct its mistakes and return to the track of resolving the dispute through negotiation," Yang told the UN assembly.

China has demanded the return of the uninhabited islands, known as the Diaoyu in Chinese and the Senkaku in Japanese, for decades. Taiwan also claims the islands.

Yang reaffirmed his country's historical claim that Japan tricked China into signing a treaty ceding the islands in 1895. Japan states that the islands were legally incorporated into its territory.

"The moves taken by Japan are totally illegal and invalid. They can in no way change the historical fact that Japan stole Diaoyu and its affiliated islands from China and the fact that China has territorial sovereignty over them," said the Chinese minister.

Japan's move was in "outright denial" of its defeat in World War II, he added, reaffirming China's repeated references to the 1939-45 war.

Yang and Japan's Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba held stern talks on the dispute in New York on Tuesday, and Yang's speech sparked sharp exchanges between Japanese and Chinese diplomats as each sought a right of reply.

Insisting that Japan legally incorporated the islands into its territory in 1895, Japan's deputy UN ambassador Kazuo Kodama said that "an assertion that Japan took the islands from China cannot logically stand."

Kodama added that the references to World War II were "unconvincing and unproductive."

China's UN envoy Li Baodong responded that "the Japanese delegate once again brazenly distorted history, resorting to spurious fallacious arguments that defy all reason and logic to justify their aggression of Chinese territory."

"The Japanese government still clings to its obsolete colonial mindset," Li added. "China is capable of safeguarding the integrity of its territory," the ambassador warned.

When Kodama responded that the islands "are clearly an inherent territory of Japan," Li returned to the attack. He said his Japanese counterpart "feels no guilt for Japan's history of aggression and colonialism."

The Japanese government's purchase of the islands is based purely on "the logic of robbers," he stormed.


The United States on Thursday called for cooler heads to prevail amid regional tensions over disputed island chains, saying it was vital for the world economy to preserve stability in Asia.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton held a series of meetings with Asian leaders, including talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi, and then separate discussions with the foreign ministers of all countries belonging to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

The stakes are high with simmering tensions between China and Japan over disputed islands in the East China Sea, and a separate row over another archipelago in the South China Sea.

"I think it would be fair to say that all Asian leaders understand that this is the cockpit of the global economy," a senior State Department official said.

"With the United States still recovering, with Europe in a profound slowdown... it is essential that we maintain peace and stability in Asia," he added.

Tensions have escalated in the South China Sea with the Philippines and Vietnam accusing China of stepping up harassment of their fishermen and ships in a bid to exert Beijing's claims to virtually all of the strategic waterway.

ASEAN foreign ministers in July failed for the first time in the bloc's 45-year history to produce a joint communique at annual talks amid divisions over whether to stand up to China over the South China Sea row.

Brunei, which next year will serve as the ASEAN chair, is one of six nations with various claims -- some of them overlapping -- over the South China Sea, through which around half of the world's commercial cargo is transported.

Clinton has pushed for ASEAN and China to agree on a code of conduct that would manage disputes and prevent incidents at sea from escalating into full-blown conflicts.

The State Department official said ASEAN leaders had described initial talks with China as "important, informal interactions. Positive. Still early phases, but I think initially encouraging."

"The ASEANs are I think encouraged by this beginning set of interactions with China. We want it to take shape and go forward."

China is also embroiled in a dispute with Japan over an archipelago in the East China Sea that Beijing knows as the Diaoyu islands and Tokyo calls the Senkaku.

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi late Thursday accused Japan of stealing the disputed islands as he took the bitter territorial dispute to the UN General Assembly.

"They can in no way change the historical fact that Japan stole" the Diaoyu islands, Yang said in a speech.

In Clinton's meeting earlier with her Japanese counterpart Yang, she "again urged that cooler heads prevail. That Japan and China engage in dialogue to calm the waters," another senior State Department official said.

"We believe that Japan and China have the resources, have the restraint, have the ability to work on this directly and take tensions down. And that is our message to both sides."

On Thursday, China criticized Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda for his "obstinate persistence" after he insisted there could be no compromise with Beijing on the ownership of Diaoyu islands.

Noda had said on Wednesday that the islands were "an integral part" of Japanese territory "in the light of history and of international law."

Clinton and Yang met in a New York hotel on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly and for what a US official described as a "very full meeting."

They also talked about issues concerning the South China Seas, North Korea, human rights in China and Tibet and bilateral economic relations.

Yang met on Tuesday with his Japanese counterpart Koichiro Gemba, holding what was described as "stern talks" on the bitterly disputed islands but made no breakthrough, diplomats said.

China has been infuriated by the Japanese government's move to buy the East China Sea islands from a private owner.

Japan and China have disputed the islands for decades, but tensions flared again in recent weeks leading to street protests in Chinese cities.

Chinese government ships have sailed into waters around the disputed islands in recent days, along with vessels from Taiwan, which also claims the islands.

Disputed isles: claims by Japan and China
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 28, 2012 - China on Friday took its dispute with Japan to the United Nations, accusing Tokyo of stealing islands in the East China Sea over which the two sides have long wrangled.

Here is a brief outline of the governments' competing claims to what Japan calls Senkaku and China calls Diaoyu.

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".

Ten years later, 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 that Beijing expressed no objection at the time to their exclusion.

China and Taiwan began claiming the islands after 1970, after the possibility emerged of energy reserves being found in the seabed nearby, Japan says.

It added that the islands that were nationalised on September 11 were previously owned by the Government of Japan until 1932 when a private citizen acquired them.

Japan says this month saw no more than "a nominal transfer of real property under domestic law, which is not a major change of the current situation".

As such, this purchase "should not raise any issues with other countries or region.

"There is no change in the policy to ensure a continued peaceful and stable maintenance and management of the islands over the long term."

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 the Chinese government.

China also insists that a map published by Japan in the 1780s underlines the Chinese claim to islands.

Beijing says the dispute over the islands' sovereignty only emerged when they were ceded to Japan -- along with Taiwan -- at the end of the 1894-5 Sino-Japanese war, which China calls an "illegal" Japanese occupation.

After World War II, Tokyo relinquished its claim over Taiwan and the Penghu islands, which are located in the Taiwan Strait.

China says the Diaoyu islands were also supposed to have been returned to China but have wrongly remained in Japan's hands.

Taiwan separately claims ownership of the islands.

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Author Murakami wades into Japan-China island row
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 28, 2012 - Haruki Murakami, one of the world's foremost novelists, waded into the territorial row between China and Japan on Friday, warning of the peril of politicians offering the "cheap liquor" of nationalism.

His intervention came as Beijing launched a blistering attack on Tokyo at the United Nations, accusing Tokyo of theft, as the dispute over the ownership of a chain of islands intensified.

The Japanese author of "Norwegian Wood" said cool heads should prevail.

Writing in the liberal-leaning Asahi Shimbun, Murakami, who has been tipped as a future Nobel laureate, said disputes over land existed because of the unfortunate system of dividing humanity into countries with national borders.

"When a territorial issue ceases to be a practical matter and enters the realm of 'national emotions', it creates a dangerous situation with no exit.

"It is like cheap liquor. Cheap liquor gets you drunk after only a few shots and makes you hysterical.

"It makes you speak loudly and act rudely... But after your drunken rampage you are left with nothing but an awful headache the next morning.

"We must be careful about politicians and polemicists who lavish us with this cheap liquor and fan this kind of rampage," he wrote.

The ownership of the uninhabited but strategically-coveted Senkaku islands has been a running sore in relations between China and Japan for decades.

Tokyo administers them, but Beijing claims them under the name the Diaoyu Islands.

Tensions between two of the world's largest economies began bubbling earlier this year when the nationalist governor of Tokyo said he wanted to buy and develop the islands.

They spiked when the government swooped to nationalise them, a move Tokyo says was purely administrative but which Beijing lashed out at as a provocation.

The war of words continued Friday with Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi blasting Japan at the United Nations in New York.

"The moves taken by Japan are totally illegal and invalid," he said.

"They can in no way change the historical fact that Japan stole Diaoyu and its affiliated islands from China and the fact that China has territorial sovereignty over them".

The author said he was shocked by reports that books by Japanese writers had been removed from Chinese stores because of the dispute.

"One of the main purposes of cultural exchange is to bring about an understanding that we are all human beings who share emotions and inspirations, even if we speak different languages," he wrote.

"That is, so to speak, the path through which souls can come and go beyond national borders."

The author said he dearly hoped there would be no retaliation in kind by Japanese bookshops.

"You soon sober up after the buzz of cheap liquor passes," he said. "But the path for souls to come and go must not be blocked."

Murakami, who enjoys commercial and critical success around the world with his intricately crafted tales of the absurdity and loneliness of modern life, has never shied away from controversy.

When he received the 2009 Jerusalem Prize, Israel's highest literary honour for foreign writers, he obliquely criticised the Middle East conflict.

"If there is a hard, high wall and an egg that breaks against it, no matter how right the wall or how wrong the egg, I will stand on the side of the egg," he said at the ceremony in Jerusalem.

His works, including the titles "Kafka on the Shore" and "The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle", have been translated into almost 40 languages. He has a large following in China, South Korea and Taiwan, as well as in Europe.

He was awarded Spain's Order of Arts and Letters in 2010 and the Czech Republic's foremost literary award, the Franz Kafka Prize, in 2006.



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SUPERPOWERS
Japan warns China against 'attacks' in island spat
United Nations (AFP) Sept 26, 2012
Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda insisted Wednesday there could be no compromise with China on the ownership of a disputed island chain and denounced attacks on Japanese interests. Speaking to reporters at the UN General Assembly in New York, Noda said China misunderstands the issues at stake and demanded an end to threats against Japanese citizens and business interests in China by nat ... read more


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