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China says Japan defence paper 'ignores facts': Xinhua
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 12, 2013


Obama warns China against 'coercion' at sea
Washington (AFP) July 11, 2013 - US President Barack Obama warned China on Thursday against using force or intimidation in its tense maritime disputes with its neighbors and urged a peaceful resolution.

Obama, meeting Chinese officials who were in Washington for wide-ranging talks, "urged China to manage its maritime disputes with its neighbors peacefully, without the use of intimidation or coercion," a White House statement said.

Tensions have steadily risen between China and Japan, which accuses its growing neighbor of sending an increasing number of ships to exert its claim over unpopulated islands managed by Tokyo in the East China Sea.

The Philippines and Vietnam have also charged that China has used assertive means to exert claims in the conflict-riven South China Sea, although tensions have abated slightly with Hanoi in recent weeks.

State Councilor Yang Jiechi, addressing a press event at the end of the two days of talks, said that China explained its "principled position" on the East China Sea and South China Sea.

China "expressed the hope that the United States will support the efforts of the parties concerned to properly handle and resolve the relevant disputes through dialogue," Yang told a press event.

"China is the firmest promoter of the freedom of navigation in all oceans around the world, and China will continue to firmly implement this policy," he said.

The United States since 2010 has repeatedly been outspoken over the South China Sea, saying that it has a national interest in ensuring freedom of navigation but does not take sides on individual claims.

With an eye on the tensions, the United States has boosted military cooperation with Japan and the Philippines -- which are both treaty-bound allies -- as well as with former war adversary Vietnam.

China has lashed out at Japan over an official defence report by Tokyo, calling it untruthful and wrongly labelling Beijing a threat, state media reported on Friday.

The new Japanese defence white paper is the first since a long-simmering dispute with China and Taiwan over uninhabited islands in the East China Sea heated up last year.

It "deliberately ignores facts and plays up 'China's military threat'", the state-run Xinhua news agency quoted Chinese defence ministry spokesman Geng Yansheng as saying.

The document, approved by Tokyo on Tuesday, is an annual report on Japan's defence capabilities and regional security.

It rebuked Beijing for behaviour Tokyo said could trigger an incident.

"China... has taken action described as coercive, which includes risky behaviour," the report said.

Examples included intrusions into Japan's territorial waters and violation of airspace "and even dangerous actions that could cause a contingency", it said.

China has the world's largest military and has dramatically increased its capabilities in recent years, with its first aircraft carrier going into service in 2012.

Geng called China's conduct legitimate in safeguarding national sovereignty and said that Japan's paper made groundless accusations.

He also described China as being on a peaceful development path.

Japan administers the Senkaku islands, though Beijing claims them for itself as the Diaoyu and Taiwan also declares ownership.

Tensions have spiked in the past year and have led to Chinese and Japanese ships and aircraft playing cat and mouse with each other.

The white paper said Japanese fighters were scrambled more than 300 times against Chinese planes flying near Japan's airspace in the year to March, a new record.

It reiterated accusations a Chinese frigate locked weapons-targeting radar on a Japanese destroyer in January -- a claim Beijing has previously denied.

Since coming to power in December, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has cast doubt on Japan's commitment to pacifism enshrined in a constitution imposed on the country by the United States after the Second World War.

Abe's calls for constitutional revision have raised the ire of neighbouring China, South Korea and North Korea, where memories of Japanese military and colonial occupation remain sensitive.

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