Sunday, August 19, 2012

Japan, China islands disputes deepen with landings, protests


EAST CHINA SEA (Reuters) - Anti-Japanese protests rocked Chinese cities on Sunday after nationalists from Japan landed on an East China Sea island at the heart of a territorial dispute between the two nations, the largest flare-up of Chinese public anger over Japan in years.

In several Chinese cities, thousands took to the streets, including in Shenzhen where small groups overturned Japanese cars and shouted slogans denouncing Japan's claim over the islands, in footage carried by Hong Kong's Cable Television.

Some used bare fists to smash in the windows of a white Honda Chinese police car as others rocked and pushed the car over to jubilant cheers. Others stomped on the overturned vehicles, screaming and waving the Chinese flag. Police arrested several protesters in Shenzhen after the demonstrations.


"The illegal behavior of Japanese right-wingers has violated China's territorial sovereignty," China's foreign ministry said in a statement, saying Beijing had lodged an official protest.

Tokyo and Beijing have been feuding for decades over the island chain, known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China, near potentially huge maritime gas fields.

The country-wide demonstrations reflect lingering resentment among many Chinese over Japan's World War Two occupation, with some in the crowds urging Beijing's Communist Party leaders to stand up more to Tokyo.

"They should return the islands to us and apologize," said a young man in the Shenzhen protest, as others around him, both young and old, brandished Chinese flags and banners demanding that Japan leave the islands.

Japanese news agency Kyodo said protesters numbered in the thousands in the cities of Shenzhen and Hangzhou and reported that groups of protesters had burned Japanese flags and had broken into Japanese restaurants.

In Guangzhou, hundreds protested outside the Japanese consulate, which was ringed by Chinese police and steel barricades.

Tensions flared last week after seven of a group of 14 Chinese activists slipped past Japan's Coast Guard to land on one of the uninhabited isles and raised a Chinese flag.

Keen to avoid a rerun of a nasty feud that chilled economic and diplomatic ties in 2010, Japan deported the activists within days and Beijing's response was relatively muted.

But the stand-off escalated again early on Sunday when 10 members of a group of more than 100 Japanese nationalists who had sailed to the island chain swam ashore to one of the islets and waved Japanese flags.

Three Japanese Coast Guard vessels were nearby, a Reuters TV journalist on board one of the boats said.

"I was hoping that someone with a real sense of Japanese spirit and courage would go and land and raise the flag, I just feel they've done a good job," said Kazuko Uematsu, a local lawmaker from Shizuoka Prefecture who was part of the flotilla.

"DON'T MESS AROUND"

The activists later swam back to their boats and were being questioned by Japanese customs officials.

Japan's government had denied the group permission to land on the islands, which it leases from private Japanese citizens.

"This is a way of saying to not mess around," Toshio Tamogami, a leader of the Japanese group, said before the flotilla set sail on Saturday. "We hope to convey ... both to China and the Japanese people that the Senkaku are our territory," Tamogami said.

The flotilla included several members of parliament and local lawmakers.

Source: http://hartfordcourant.feedsportal.com/c/34278/f/623722/s/2284d119/l/0L0Scourant0N0Cnews0Cnation0Eworld0Csns0Ert0Eus0Ejapan0Echinabre87i0A0Af0E20A120A8180H0A0H39734140Bstory0Dtrack0Frss/story01.htm

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