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China flotilla in Japan dispute island waters
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 10, 2013


Japan lawmaker cool to moves on China
Washington, District Of Columbia (AFP) Sept 10, 2013 - A coalition ally of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday rejected sending officials to islands claimed by China, calling instead for greater efforts to build trust with neighboring countries.

Abe's government has not ruled out stationing officials on the islands amid worsening ties with China, which Tuesday sent eight ships to the area of the East China Sea.

"Having Japanese government employees stationed in the Senkaku islands is for the moment not something I think we should do," Natsuo Yamaguchi, leader of New Komeito, said on a visit to Washington.

"What is more important on the Senkakus is, regardless of the differences of opinions, how do we overcome that to improve relations between the two countries," Yamaguchi said at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Abe, a conservative who heads the Liberal Democratic Party, has vowed a firm defense of Japan's control of the islands, which are known as the Diaoyu in Chinese.

New Komeito is a Buddhist-oriented party known for its strong support of Japan's pacifist post-World War II constitution.

Yamaguchi, the first leader of New Komeito to visit Washington in 10 years, said his trip aimed to show that his party was a critical player despite a sweeping election victory in July that strengthened Abe's hand.

Yamaguchi voiced mixed feelings about one of Abe's likely goals -- lifting a ban on so-called collective self-defense that would allow Japan to assist the United States if the ally were attacked.

Under current policy, Japan observes a narrow definition of self-defense that allows force only in response to a direct attack on itself.

"We're not at the stage where the public can understand this, that's my feeling," Yamaguchi said of collective self-defense.

While cautioning that his party's opposition was not a "foregone conclusion," Yamaguchi said Japan had to offer a convincing rationale to change longstanding policy.

"There have to be substantive reasons and neighboring countries and our ally (the United States) have to have any concerns allayed. They can't feel that there is any danger involved," Yamaguchi said.

China and South Korea frequently criticize Japan on issues related to its wartime history.

Eight Chinese ships were in waters around islands at the centre of a bitter dispute with Japan on Tuesday, as Tokyo said it had not ruled out stationing officials there.

The moves came the day before the first anniversary of Tokyo's nationalisation of part of the chain.

The Chinese coastguard flotilla was the biggest seen in waters around the Tokyo-administered Senkakus since eight government ships were tracked there in April, a spokesman for the Japanese coastguard said.

Official media in China, citing the State Oceanic Administration (SOA), said it was the 59th "patrol" of the area since September 2012, when Tokyo took the islands into public ownership.

Beijing claims the archipelago as its own and calls the islands the Diaoyus.

The report by Xinhua said China's vessels had gone as close to the islands as 0.28 nautical miles during the past 12 months, but did not specify when.

Japan's coastguard said seven vessels had entered Japanese territorial waters around 10:30 am (0130 GMT) and another joined the flotilla a few hours later.

They had all left the waters around seven hours later.

The Japanese foreign ministry summoned the Chinese ambassador to Japan, Cheng Yonghua, to formally register its displeasure at the move.

"We will protect territorial land, air and water at any cost," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a news conference. "We will never compromise on the issue of sovereignty."

But Cheng told reporters that he had conveyed China's position to the Japanese government, laying the blame for soured ties at Tokyo's door.

"Japan's purchase of the islands confused the relationship between Japan and China," he said.

Asked if Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's cabinet will station officials on the islands, Suga said the government was "considering it as an option", but did not elaborate.

The incident came almost a year to the day since the long-running dispute over the ownership of the islands flared into a bitter row that continues to dog relations.

The islands -- believed to harbour natural resources below their seabed -- are seen as a potential flashpoint that some observers fear could lead to armed conflict between the Asian giants.

On Monday, Japan scrambled fighter jets after an unidentified drone flew near the islands. The drone did not enter Japanese airspace.

On Sunday, Japan tracked Chinese bombers that flew in international airspace between two islands in the Okinawa chain. Tokyo said it was the first time they had used that route to get to the Pacific.

Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera said Beijing appeared to be doing more ahead of September 11.

"Tomorrow marks one year since the Japanese government nationalised the Senkaku islands," he said. "I am aware that today many Chinese ships have entered our territorial waters ... I have the impression that (China is) becoming more active."

Asked about any preparation for Wednesday's anniversary, he said: "We will continue taking necessary precautionary measures as we have been doing."

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