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China sends ships to islands disputed with Japan: Xinhua

Conqueror

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Gutsy

[video=youtube;R3Za8jmTgEc]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3Za8jmTgEc[/video]


The Chinese have always been that way. Way to go ! :smile: At least, they are gutsy enough to protest.
 

Conqueror

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Did You Get Ta See Dam ?

[video=youtube;HY12wk745hg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HY12wk745hg[/video]


Hey conqueror, nice music.


Good to hear that you appreciate it. :smile: Being a Queenstowner, did you get to see the Duke and the Duchess of Cambridge ?
 

streetcry

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Re: Did You Get Ta See Dam ?

[h=1]Russia: Diaoyu Islands belong to China[/h]

Some Russian media say Japan’s so-called purchasing of the Diaoyu Islands will not only hurt the relations between China and Japan, but Japan’s economy.
An analyst from the Institute of Far Eastern Studies of the Russian Academy Of Sciences says the Diaoyu Islands is indisputable territory of China whether from the historical background or evidence.


It noted some right-wing parties denied history and called for Japan to learn lessons from World War Two. And some Russia media say Japan’s slumping economy and territorial disputes with its neighboring countries makes some politicians to show their tough stance over the territorial issue to seek more support.


But Japan’s decision to buy the Diaoyu Islands not only hurt the feelings of the Chinese people, but its own economy. It also stressed the issue should be resolved by the two countries, without the interference of any third country.
 

Rakyat

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Re: Did You Get Ta See Dam ?

Taiwan demonstrators burn Japanese flag
Posted: 18 September 2012 1352 hrs
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Anti-Japan activists chant slogans in front of parliament building in Taipei on Sep 18 to demand the Taiwan govt to cooperate with China against Japan over a group of disputed islands. (AFP/Sam Yeh)


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TAIPEI: More than 100 Taiwanese activists burnt a Japanese flag in a protest in downtown Taipei on Tuesday, as anger over disputed islands in the East China Sea spilled over from China.

The demonstration outside Taiwan's parliament took place as a row over the islands -- known as Diaoyu in Chinese and Senkaku in Japanese -- prompted thousands to hit the streets in major cities on the Chinese mainland.

"When our compatriots in the mainland are striving to protect the Diaoyu islands, we people in Taiwan cannot remain silent," said a spokesman for the small Union Party, the organiser of the protest.

Taiwan, China and Japan all claim the uninhabited islands, which are 400 kilometres (250 miles) from the Okinawan capital of Naha and 200 kilometres from Taiwan.

The Taiwanese protesters called for cooperation with China to get back the disputed islands, which they said were "stolen" by Japan, and blamed the United States for favouring Tokyo.

"The Americans should stop throwing their weight behind Japan, and the Japanese would back away," said the Union Party spokesman, who declined to give his name.

Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou has said Taipei has no intention to work with Beijing, mindful that doing so could hurt the island's ties with Japan.

Tensions mounted after Japan announced last week it had completed a planned purchase of some of the islands, prompting Taiwan to recall its envoy to Tokyo and triggering mass protests in China.

The islands lie on vital shipping lanes and are believed to be located near potentially rich gas fields.

- AFP/al
 

streetcry

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Japanese activists land on disputed island
Posted: 18 September 2012 1449 hrs
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This file picture, taken on August 19, 2012 shows a Japanese activist waving a national flag after landing on a group of islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.
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TOKYO: Two Japanese activists landed on an island at the centre of a bitter dispute with China on Tuesday, the government in Tokyo said, as fresh anti-Japanese protests rocked Chinese cities.

The landing came as a Chinese fisheries patrol boat sailed to waters near the islands, although it did not enter Japanese territory.

"Two Japanese landed on Uotsurijima at about 9:30 am (0030 GMT)," Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura told reporters, referring to the largest island in the chain. "The coastguard said they have already left," he said.

Jiji Press, citing police in Okinawa, said the two were from Japan's main southern island of Kyushu.

They arrived in the area in a small boat and swam to the island, a spokesman at the coastguard in Okinawa said, adding they were back in their boat shortly afterwards.

The landing, the fourth by Japanese this year, came after coastguards warned away a Chinese fisheries patrol boat spotted near the island early Tuesday.

The ship was sighted 42 kilometres (26 miles) north-northwest of Uotsurijima at 7:00am (2200 GMT Monday) but had left the area five hours later, the coastguard said.

"Diaoyu is Chinese sovereign territory. We are carrying out legitimate activity," the coastguard quoted the Chinese ship as saying in reply to their warning to leave.

Widespread anti-Japanese protests, some of them violent, have been held across China in recent days over the East China Sea islands known as Diaoyu by Beijing and Senkaku by Tokyo. They are claimed by both but controlled by Japan.

Major Japanese firms including Canon and Honda have suspended operations at several plants in China, according to officials and reports Monday.

After meetings in Tokyo with senior Japanese officials on Monday, US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta -- who later travelled on to Beijing -- urged "calm and restraint on all sides".

A fresh wave of anti-Japan rallies was in progress Tuesday, the anniversary of the 1931 "Mukden incident" that led to Japan's invasion of Manchuria, which is commemorated every year in China.

China and Japan have close economic and business ties, with two-way trade totalling $342.9 billion last year, according to Chinese figures.

But the two countries' political relationship is often tense due to the territorial dispute and Chinese resentment over past conflicts and atrocities.

A landing on the island by pro-Beijing nationalists in August marked the start of a sudden worsening of relations between China and Japan.

Tokyo announced last week it had bought three of the islands, which it administers, from their private Japanese landowner.

A Taiwanese politician said Tuesday a group of Taiwanese fishermen were planning to sail this week to the archipelago.

About 60 fishing boats each carrying five to six people are expected to head for the islands Saturday from a port in northeast Taiwan's Ilan county, said Lin Chi-shan, a co-organiser of the event and a member of Ilan county council.

Taiwan also claims the islands, which are uninhabited but strategically important.
 

streetcry

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China warns of "further actions" in Japan row


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BEIJING: China's defence minister said Tuesday his country reserved the right to take "further actions" to resolve a territorial dispute with Japan but voiced hope the feud would be settled through diplomacy.

Beijing is following the situation in the East China Sea closely "and we reserve rights to further actions", General Liang Guanglie said through an interpreter at a joint news conference with US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.

"Of course, that being said, we still hope for a peaceful and negotiated solution to this issue," Liang said when asked if China would use its military power in the crisis.

The islets, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, are uninhabited but situated in rich fishing waters and said to sit atop valuable natural resources. They are controlled by Japan but claimed by China and Taiwan.

The general blamed Tokyo for the spike in tensions, saying the archipelago has belonged to China for centuries, dating back to the Ming dynasty.

"The current escalation of tension over this dispute was totally caused by the Japanese side," he said.

Washington has a security alliance with Tokyo and Panetta appealed to both sides to lower the temperature.

"With respect to these current tensions, we are urging calm and restraint by all sides," the US defence chief told the same press conference.

"It is no country's interest for this situation to escalate into conflict that would undermine peace and stability in this very important region.

"This has been my consistent message throughout the week," said Panetta, who stopped in the Japanese capital before flying to Beijing on Monday.

- AFP/cc
 

streetcry

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11 Chinese ships near disputed isles: Japan coastguard
Posted: 18 September 2012 1727 hrs
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A Chinese marine surveillance ship cruising near the disputed islands in the East China Sea. (AFP/Japan Coast Guard)

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TOKYO: Eleven Chinese government ships entered waters around Japanese-administered islands Tuesday, Japan's coastguard said, hours after two Japanese activists swam to one of the disputed islets.

None of the vessels had entered territorial waters, but all had gone into an area known under international maritime law as the contiguous zone, in a move that came as fresh anti-Japan protests rocked Chinese cities.

"As of 4:30pm (0730 GMT), 10 Chinese maritime surveillance ships were spotted in contiguous waters off Uotsurijima," a coastguard spokesman told AFP, referring to the largest island in the Senkaku, a chain China calls Diaoyu.

"A fisheries patrol boat re-entered contiguous waters off Kubajima at 12:16pm but we have not been informed of its location since."

Earlier in the day, Japan's top government spokesman said two Japanese had swum to Uotsurijima.

"Two Japanese landed on Uotsurijima at about 9:30am (0030 GMT)," Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura told reporters. "The coastguard said they have already left," he said.

Jiji Press, citing police in Okinawa, said the two were from Japan's main southern island of Kyushu.

They arrived in the area in a small boat and swam to the island, a spokesman at the coastguard in Okinawa said, adding they were back in their boat shortly afterwards.

The landing was the fourth by Japanese this year and came weeks after seven pro-Beijing activists made it ashore on the same island, marking a sharp downturn in relations between two of the world's biggest economies.

Earlier in the day, Japan's coastguard said it had warned away a fisheries patrol vessel that had been sighted 42 kilometres (26 miles) north-northwest of Uotsurijima at 7:00am (2200 GMT Monday).

The Chinese vessel later moved close to another island, Kubajima, in the chain.

"Our patrol vessels are warning it not to enter our country's territorial waters by radio and other means," the coastguard said in a statement.

The ship had told Japanese vessels that it was "carrying out legitimate activity", arguing the islands are Chinese sovereign territory.

Widespread anti-Japanese protests, some of them violent, have erupted across China in recent days over the East China Sea islands, which lie in rich fishing waters and on important shipping lanes.

Major Japanese firms, including Canon and Honda have suspended operations at several plants in China, according to officials and reports on Monday.

After meetings in Tokyo with senior Japanese officials on Monday, US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta -- who later travelled on to Beijing -- urged "calm and restraint on all sides".

A fresh wave of anti-Japan rallies was in progress on Tuesday, the anniversary of the 1931 "Mukden incident" that led to Japan's invasion of Manchuria, which is commemorated every year in China.

China and Japan have close economic and business ties, with two-way trade totalling $342.9 billion last year, according to Chinese figures.

But the two countries' political relationship is often tense due to the territorial dispute and Chinese resentment over past conflicts and atrocities.

A landing on the island by pro-Beijing nationalists in August marked the start of a sudden worsening of relations between China and Japan.

Tokyo announced last week it had bought three of the islands, which it administers, from their private Japanese landowner.

A Taiwanese politician said Tuesday a group of Taiwanese fishermen were planning to sail this week to the archipelago.

About 60 fishing boats each carrying five to six people are expected to head for the islands Saturday from a port in northeast Taiwan's Ilan county, said Lin Chi-shan, a co-organiser of the event and a member of Ilan county council.

Taiwan also claims the islands, which are uninhabited but strategically important.

- AFP/al
 

Jah_rastafar_I

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Asset
Re: Did You Get Ta See Dam ?

T

TAIPEI: More than 100 Taiwanese activists burnt a Japanese flag in a protest in downtown Taipei on Tuesday, as anger over disputed islands in the East China Sea spilled over from China.


Tensions mounted after Japan announced last week it had completed a planned purchase of some of the islands, prompting Taiwan to recall its envoy to Tokyo and triggering mass protests in China.

The islands lie on vital shipping lanes and are believed to be located near potentially rich gas fields.

- AFP/al


Interesting even the taiwanese are helping china. They are willing to put their issue of independence aside to help china fight with the japs.
 

Velma

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Re: Did You Get Ta See Dam ?

Interesting even the taiwanese are helping china. They are willing to put their issue of independence aside to help china fight with the japs.

Just a very small minority. Even the most hardcore KMT will never help China due to distrust.

China will be able to find more supporters in HK than TW.
 

silentisgolden

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Re: Did You Get Ta See Dam ?

[h=2]"Purchase" of Diaoyu Islands big mistake by Japanese gov't: Spanish expert[/h]

MADRID, September 18 (Xinhua) -- The Japanese government made a big mistake concerning the Diaoyu Islands issue and its move could cause an unpredictable chain reaction, an international studies expert said in an article published in the El Mundo daily.
Angel Maestro, a Spanish international studies expert, said the repercussions of Japan's "islands-purchasing" move were not limited to geographical fallout but, on a much wider scale, political and economic influences.
Especially in the economic field, its impacts could be stronger, Maestro said in the article: "'Purchase' of Diaoyu Islands big mistake by Japanese government."
Historically, the small islands had been the Chinese territories until 1895 when Japan illegally seized the Diaoyu Island and its affiliated islands.
Maestro said that Japan, which has now become one of the world's economic powers free from wars of any kind in recent years, only finds itself in a strange situation with its "absurd expansionism" of looking at a geographically miniscule territory.
Maestro said that it is strange that Japan took such a measure to "buy what is an inseparable part of China" and that its current political leaders have not analyzed the consequences that could arise from a worsening situation.
 

Velma

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Re: Did You Get Ta See Dam ?

To be honest, Noda was forced into buying, because Tokyo governor, Ishihara Shintaro was about to purchase it with his own metropolitan funds. For Noda, who is trying to maintain good relations with China, this is worrying, for Ishihara has often badmouthed the Chinese, makes jingoistic statements and always claim that Japanese did no wrong during the Imperial years. If Ishihara bought over the islands, he had promised to develop a port and possibly, a city in the future. This will mark doom for relations. Hence, he bought over the islands, hoping that by buying over and not developing them, China will frown initially but understand the reasoning and keep the relations stable. It might have been said that Noda expected such a reaction, hence his relatively calm reaction to the riots, notshowing shock in his statements but merely ask the CCP to protect the Japanese civilians living over there.

Hu Jintao has already knew Noda was going to purchase the islands. He understood the logic behind the sale and also knew it is the lesser evil than Ishihara buying over them. However, the sale has tainted his rule, making him the first CCP president to 'cede' territorial sovereignty over to other nations, a.k.a Hong Kong in the 1800s again and a future vilified historical figure in China. For him, who has relatively been friendly with Japan, this is nothing but a huge slap to his face, hence the huge uproar despite him knowing the logic.
 

silentisgolden

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Re: 还我山河

[h=1]China voices strong dissatisfaction over attack on consulate general in Japan[/h]

BEIJING, Sept. 18 (Xinhua) -- China on Tuesday voiced strong dissatisfaction over an attack on one of its consulate general offices in Japan.
"We have lodged solemn representations to Japan," said Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei at a regular press briefing, as some Japanese threw two smoke bombs into the Chinese Consulate General in Fukuoka in southwestern Japan on Monday.
Hong said every country should protect foreign organizations and citizens there from danger.
The spokesman added that China strongly demands that the Japanese government take measures to stop violence against Chinese institutions and people in Japan, as well as investigate the incident and handle the perpetrators according to relevant laws.
 
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