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Japan brushes off China 'troublemaker' criticism
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 16, 2014


Philippines to defy China fishing rule: defence chief
Palayan, Philippines (AFP) Jan 16, 2014 - Philippine fishermen should ignore a Chinese rule requiring foreign fishing vessels to secure permission to enter much of the South China Sea, Defence Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said Thursday.

The rule was passed in November by China's southern island province of Hainan and took effect this year as tensions have escalated over overlapping claims to the waters between China, the Philippines, Vietnam and other nations.

Gazmin, visiting a military camp in the northern Philippines, said the Hainan law did not apply to Philippine territorial waters, some of which overlap with those of China which claims most of the South China Sea.

"We will not follow their rules in our own territory. Why do we need permission from another country that does not own our fishing grounds? These are ours," he told reporters.

"We still have the capability to secure them (Filipino fishermen)," Gazmin said.

The Philippines has been locked in an increasingly tense standoff with China involving disputed reefs and islands in the South China Sea, in an area Manila calls the West Philippine Sea.

Gazmin said the Philippine government would provide escort vessels to Filipino fishermen "if necessary".

The Philippine foreign department on Tuesday alleged that the Hainan rule impinges on the Philippines' exclusive economic zone, an area extending 200 miles from its coast where it has sovereign rights to explore and exploit the natural resources under a UN convention ratified in 1982.

In 2012, the Filipino navy confronted Chinese ships on Scarborough Shoal, a small outcrop just off the coast of the country's main island of Luzon.

The Chinese eventually gained control of the outcrop after Manila backed down. However, the government sought UN arbitration to settle the dispute, a move rejected by China.

"China has been projecting herself as a superpower, but chooses to pick on small countries like ours that have puny military capability," Gazmin said Thursday.

He cited the Hainan fishing rule as well as Beijing's earlier unilateral declaration of an air defence zone over the East China Sea that includes areas disputed with Japan.

Japan on Thursday brushed off a bristling attack in which a Chinese diplomat branded Prime Minister Shinzo Abe a "troublemaker", saying Beijing's sentiment is inaccurate and ignores the facts.

The rebuttal came after China's envoy to the African Union fired the latest salvo in an increasingly bitter war of words between Asia's two largest economies with a dramatic display of pictures he said showed the results of Japanese atrocities during World War II.

In a press conference held the day after Abe wrapped up a landmark African tour aimed at boosting Japan's presence in Africa, Ambassador Xie Xiaoyan accused him of trying to undermine Beijing's own diplomatic reach.

"Abe has become the biggest troublemaker in Asia," Xie, who is also China's ambassador to Ethiopia, told reporters.

"He has worked hard to portray China as a threat, aiming to sow discord, raising regional tensions and so creating a convenient excuse for the resurrection of Japanese militarism," the ambassador said at the news conference.

He said the conservative Japanese leader's visit to Africa was part of what he described as a "China containment policy".

Xie also repeated criticism over Abe's visit last month to the Yasukuni war shrine, which honours around 2.5 million of Japan's war dead, including several high-level officials executed for war crimes after World War II.

In Tokyo on Thursday, the government issued a low-key response, with a deputy press secretary of the foreign minister telling reporters Japan had a decades-long record of peace.

"Japan has been contributing to the peace and stability of the region as well as the world for 60 years since World War II," said Koichi Mizushima.

"Japan has no intention of containing China. Rather, Japan wants China to be a responsible partner in contributing to peace and stability," said Mizushima.

The response is an increasingly familiar mantra from Tokyo, which says it has repented of its warring past and made reparations for its brutal invasions and occupations of the mid-20th century.

It says Beijing persistently resurrects the issue for domestic political reasons and to distract attention at home from inequalities and the poor state of the environment.

Beijing says Tokyo refuses to accept its responsibility for atrocities carried out in the name of its then-emperor, and says Abe's visit to Yasukuni is evidence.

"The purpose of the (shrine) visit was not to warship war criminals at all. (Abe) visited Yasukuhi to pledge that Japan will never wage war again," Mizushima said.

"The Chinese government criticism... is not accurate."

Since Abe's pilgrimage to Yasukuni last month, China's ambassadors have penned more than 30 opinion pieces in foreign newspapers as part of a global public-relations offensive by Beijing seeking to rally international public opinion against the Japanese prime minister.

In one of the highest-profile exchanges, the Chinese and Japanese ambassadors to the UK used the pages of the Daily Telegraph to accuse each other's country of being Asia's Voldemort, the villain from the popular Harry Potter novels.

Sun Cheng, director of the East Asian Research Centre at the China University of Political Science and Law, was quoted by China's state-run Global Times newspaper Thursday saying that the diplomatic push "can be viewed as a new phase of China's public diplomacy".

"As China's global status rises, they have become willing to listen to China, because China's relations with Japan will more or less affect their own interests as well.

"Five or 10 years back, it would have been unimaginable if over 30 Chinese ambassadors collectively published articles in the media worldwide."

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