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Japan firms stop China operations after protests
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 17, 2012

China mission to disputed islands 'successful': Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) Sept 17, 2012 - A Chinese surveillance mission to a disputed islands chain was "successful" in asserting Beijing's sovereignty claim, state media said Monday, following huge anti-Japanese rallies across China.

Two Chinese surveillance ship fleets arrived at the islands -- called Senkaku in Japan, and Diaoyu in China -- on Friday for "law enforcement" in the area, after Tokyo had nationalised the disputed archipelago days earlier.

The visit "demonstrated China's jurisdiction over the Diaoyu Island and its affiliated islets, achieved the goal of demonstrating China's sovereignty claim and ensured the country's maritime interests," Xiao Huiwu, deputy head of China Marine Surveillance told Xinhua, the state-run news agency reported Monday.

Tokyo had on Friday summoned the Chinese ambassador to protest what it insisted was an incursion into territorial waters around islands it controls.

In response China maintained the six boats that made up the surveillance mission were patrolling sovereign territory.

Xiao also told Xinhua the CMS agency will "step up law enforcement activities around disputed islands to demonstrate China's sovereignty, stop infringements and protect China's maritime interests."

Japan's coastguard on Friday said the ships were in the area around the islands for about seven hours.

On Sunday massive anti-Japanese demonstrations were held in cities across China, with thousands mounting protests a day after an attempt to storm Tokyo's embassy in the capital.

Beijing was infuriated last week when Japan said it had bought the rocky outcrops and while the authorities often suppress demonstrations, many of Sunday's events took place with police escorting marchers, as state-run media called the protests "reasonable".


Japanese firms including Panasonic suspended operations at plants in China, companies and reports said Monday, after mass anti-Tokyo protests at the weekend over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

Speaking in Tokyo, US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta called for diplomatic efforts to resolve the worsening spat, a day after warning "misjudgement on one side or the other could result in violence, and could result in conflict".

China is Japan's biggest trading partner and the stoppages came as the ruling Communist Party's mouthpiece warned Japan's economy could suffer for up to 20 years if Beijing chose to impose sanctions over the territorial row.

Trade sanctions between Asia's two biggest economies could cast a pall over growth on the continent, which major Western countries are counting on to drive recovery from the global slowdown.

Panasonic said it was halting work at a factory in Qingdao in northeast China "for the time being" after a fire. The electronics giant had also reportedly temporarily suspended two other plants, but no immediate confirmation was available.

The camera and printer maker Canon, meanwhile, suspended three of its four main plants Monday and Tuesday to ensure the safety of its employees, a company spokesman told Dow Jones newswires.

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

The row intensified last week when the Japanese government bought three of the islands, effectively nationalising them, and China responded by sending patrol ships into the waters around them.

China and Japan have close trade and business ties, with numerous Japanese companies investing in its larger neighbour and 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 new wave of protests is expected Tuesday, the anniversary of the 1931 "Mukden incident" that led to Japan's invasion of Manchuria, which is commemorated every year in China.

A commentary in the People's Daily newspaper on the possibility of economic sanctions said: "Amidst a struggle that touches on territorial sovereignty, if Japan continues its provocations China will inevitably take on the fight."

The Japanese economy has already experienced two lost decades from the 1990s and was suffering further weakness in the aftermath of the world financial crisis and 2011 earthquake, it added.

Japan in 2010 lost its title as the world's second-biggest economy to China. "Japan's economy lacks immunity to Chinese economic measures," the state paper said -- although it added that given the interdependency of the two, sanctions would be a "double-edged sword" for China.

The commentary -- which only appeared in the paper's overseas edition -- said possible targets could include Japan's manufacturing and financial industries, exports and investments in China.

"Strategic material imports" could also be affected, it said, an apparent reference to rare earth metals used in many high-tech products including iPads and iPhones.

"Would Japan rather lose another 10 years and even be ready to fall back 20 years?" it asked.

Shares of Chinese companies with business ties to Japanese firms fell in trading in Shanghai as investors sold on worries that the territorial dispute could hurt demand for their products.

Guangzhou Automobile Group, which has manufacturing joint-ventures with Japan's Toyota and Honda, was down 7.13 percent in afternoon trading.

Dongfeng Automobile, controlled by a joint venture of Japan's Nissan, fell 2.44 percent.

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Japan PM calls on China to ensure safety of citizens
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 16, 2012 - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda on Sunday called on China to ensure the safety of Japanese people and businesses amid a growing territorial row that has seen the spread of anti-Japan demonstrations.

His comments came as thousands of protestors gathered outside Japan's embassy in Beijing, a day after angry demonstrators tried to storm the building.

The rumbling territorial dispute reached a new level during the week when Japan announced that it had bought islands in the East China Sea which it administers and calls Senkaku, but which China claims and calls Diaoyu.

Anti-Japan demonstrations spread to 50 Chinese cities Saturday, Japanese reports said, with attacks on Japanese businesses, cars and restaurants.

"This situation is a great disappointment and so we are protesting (to China)," Noda told Fuji Television.

"We want (China) to oversee the situation so that at least Japanese citizens and businesses in China will not be in danger."

Noda stressed the importance for both countries to "behave with restraint".

"We are the number two and number three economies in the world, and China's development is in Japan's interest," he said.

"I believe we can overcome the problem if we keep in mind the broader viewpoint (of the bilateral ties)."

In Qingdao in northeastern China, 10 factories connected to Japanese businesses including Panasonic were targeted by protesters Saturday, the Yomiuri Shimbun reported, citing the Japanese embassy in China as a source.

There were arson attacks and production lines were destroyed, the newspaper said, and a supermarket outlet run by Japan's Aeon was looted.

Japanese media slammed the attacks as "beyond the pale".

"The Chinese government should stop provocative actions and call for restraints to its own people," the influential Asahi Shimbun said.

Often testy Japan-China ties took a turn for the worse in August when pro-Beijing activists landed on one of the disputed islands.

They were arrested by Japanese authorities and deported. Days later about a dozen Japanese nationalists raised their country's flag on the same island, Uotsurijima, prompting protests in cities across China.

Six Chinese ships sailed into waters around the archipelago Friday, with Beijing saying they were there for "law enforcement", leading Tokyo to summon the Chinese ambassador to protest what it insisted was a territorial incursion.



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Anti-Japan protests again erupt across China
Beijing (AFP) Sept 17, 2012
Thousands of anti-Japanese demonstrators mounted protests in cities across China on Sunday over disputed islands in the East China Sea, a day after an attempt to storm Tokyo's embassy in the capital. Beijing was infuriated last week when Japan said it had bought the rocky outcrops and while the authorities often suppress demonstrations, many of Sunday's events took place with police escortin ... read more


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