China should strike back over sale: experts
Analysts Friday slammed Japan's plan to nationalize the Diaoyu Islands 
in the East China Sea as provocations which would further trash 
Sino-Japanese relations, and called on the Chinese government to take 
corresponding measures to counter Japan's scheme.
This video image, taken by the Japan Coast Guard on
 Aug 15, and released on Aug 27 shows a Chinese boat carrying Hong Kong 
activists after landing on the disputed island called Senkaku in 
Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese in the East China Sea. 
Japan's Yomiuri
 Shimbun paper reported that Japan is scheduled to hold a cabinet 
meeting on Monday to officially "nationalize" the Diaoyu Islands on 
Tuesday.
The 
Japanese government will sign a deal with the 
so-called private owners on Tuesday to purchase the islands. And the 
Japanese government believes that putting the Diaoyu Islands under state
 ownership at an early date could minimize the backlash from China, said
 the report.
The paper also noted that the actions of Tokyo 
Governor Shintaro Ishihara, who had pushed strongly for the island 
purchase, had helped drive the state toward the purchase.
Qu 
Xing, director of the China Institute of International Studies, told the
 
Global Times that by buying the islands, Japanese Prime Minister 
Yoshihiko Noda's administration is attempting to reinforce Japan's claim
 of sovereignty over the Diaoyu Islands. 
"The repeated provocations have greatly undermined Sino-Japanese relations," said the expert.
"We
 should resort to corresponding countermeasures to strike back against 
Japan's unilateral move. Japan is making their assertion by legal means.
 Accordingly, China could also reinforce our claims of sovereignty over 
the islands through legal means," said Qu.
According to the 
Kyodo
 News Agency, 
Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba said that Noda is
 unlikely to hold summit talks with Chinese 
President Hu Jintao and 
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak on the sidelines of the ongoing 
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in Vladivostok, Russia, 
indicating that formal talks would not be appropriate given renewed 
territorial rows.
Gemba added that informal and "spontaneous" exchanges may take place, the report said.
Wang
 Ping, a researcher with the Institute of Japanese Studies under the 
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times that 
Sino-Japanese relations are bound to be further undermined if Tokyo 
continues to inflame the situation.
"Japan's national interests 
as well as its strategic interests in East Asia and the West Pacific 
will also be hurt. It should better recognize the consequences of its 
moves," warned Wang.
The impact of the diplomatic rows between the two countries have already extended to the sphere of economic ties.
Reuters
 quoted Toshiyuki Shiga, a senior executive of Japanese auto maker 
Nissan, as saying that Japanese car manufacturers were having difficulty
 in holding big, outdoor promotion campaigns, which may have hurt August
 sales.
Foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Thursday that in
 order to change the current situation, Japan must immediately stop 
encroaching upon China's territorial sovereignty.
China is Japan's largest trading partner, while Japan is the fourth largest trading partner of China. 
Though Japan relies much more on its trade with China than China does Japan, economic friction is a double-edged sword, Qu said.
"The
 adverse political climate will definitely affect economic relations. 
But smashing Japanese cars and boycotting Japanese goods don't help 
resolve the problems," said Qu, calling for the public to remain 
rational.
Separately, Taiwan leader Ma Ying-jeou Friday inspected
 the Pengjia Islet, which is located 156 kilometers from the Diaoyu 
Islands. He made a speech in front of a monument on the islet and 
praised those who have helped to protect the Diaoyu Islands, reported 
the Xinhua News Agency.
Responding to a question about Ma's 
visit, Hong Lei said Friday that all Chinese, including those from both 
sides of the Taiwan Straits, are responsible for safeguarding the 
sovereignty of the islands.
By Jin Jianyu and agencies contributed to this story
 
 
Taiwan warns Japan against nationalising islands
Pengchia:  Taiwan’s president used a high-profile 
visit to a Taiwanese islet on Friday to warn Japan against making any 
attempts to nationalise islands that are part of a disputed chain in the
 East China Sea.
Escorted by warplanes and naval vessels, President Ma Ying-jeou flew 
by military helicopter to Taiwan’s Pengchia Islet, which lies off 
northern Taiwan, only about 140 kilometers (85 miles) west of the 
disputed chain.
The chain — known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China — is 
controlled by Japan but also claimed by China and Taiwan, and has been a
 key part of simmering regional tensions over rival territorial claims. 
Japan’s government reportedly is planning to buy several of the islands 
from their private Japanese owners.
Analysts say Ma chose the Taiwanese islet to make his well-measured 
gesture to raise international attention without further aggravating 
tensions.
 
South China Sea. Agencies
 
Disputes have flared over island chains in the East China and South 
China seas, rich fishing grounds with potentially lucrative oil and gas 
reserves.
But diplomatically isolated Taiwan — which China claims a part of its
 own territory 63 years after the two sides split amid civil war — has 
been largely left out of the spotlight.
Ma called on the East China Sea chain’s three claimants — Taiwan, 
China and Japan — to put aside their disputes and hold dialogues to 
jointly develop the rich resources there. He suggested bilateral or 
trilateral talks “to resolve the issue in a peaceful way.”
Ma also asked commanders at two Taiwan-controlled islets in South 
China Sea’s Pratas and Spratly island chains to strengthen guards. Those
 chains are claimed by Taiwan, China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Brunei 
and Malaysia.
“Ma has tried to avoid provoking tension, but as Taiwan’s leader, he 
must make a gesture even though the impact may be limited,” said Lo 
Chih-cheng, a political scientist at Taipei’s Soochow University.
While Taiwanese media were generally skeptical about the visit’s 
impact, some say Ma’s trip may manage to rebut Beijing’s appeal for a 
united front with Taiwan over the disputes. Many Taiwanese fear Beijing 
may be using its warming economic ties with Taiwan in recent years to 
further its goal of unifying with the self-ruled democratic island.
“The mainland is trying to create the false scenario of cross-Strait 
cooperation in the East and South China” seas, Taiwan’s China Times said
 in an editorial. - 
AP
No let-up in protests over Diaoyu Islands
By CHOW HOW BAN hbchow@thestar.com.my/Asia News Network
There have been protests on many fronts after the move on Monday by Japanese government to buy the islands from their “owners”.
CHINESE
 actress Li Bingbing became the latest ordinary citizen to publicly show
 her outrage against Japan over its claim of the disputed Diaoyu Islands
 (known in Japan as Senkaku Islands).
The 
Golden Horse Best Actress award winner turned down an invitation to attend the premiere of her latest film, 
Resident Evil: Retribution, in Tokyo on Monday in protest of the move by the Japanese government to buy the islands from their “owners”.
“The
 premiere in Tokyo was an important event for this film because it was 
the first premiere around the world. During the shoot, it was already 
decided that all the production crew should go for the Tokyo premiere,” 
she said.
“I do not like to break an appointment but after what 
had happened to the Diaoyu Islands, I did not feel like going. It is 
something I cannot stand and I thank the film company for their 
understanding,” Li was quoted by the Chinese media as saying on 
Thursday.
Two weeks ago, two Chinese men, aged 23 and 25, were 
detained for stopping the car of the Japanese Ambassador to China, 
Uichiro Niwa in downtown Beijing.
The duo allegedly emerged from 
their car and pulled the Japanese flag off Niwa’s car when the 
ambassador was on his way back to the Japanese embassy.
Another man was issued a warning for blocking Niwa’s car.
Earlier
 last month, hundreds of Chinese protesters took to the streets in 
Shenzhen and Hangzhou and called on the Chinese government to protect 
the islands, following an incident where 10 Japanese nationalists swam 
to the islands in East China Sea in response of a similar landing by 
seven Chinese activists.
Some Chinese protesters also surrounded the embassy in Beijing and the Japanese consulate office in Shenyang, Liaoning province.
Two
 senior citizens who threw eggs at the embassy were persuaded to leave, 
while another demonstrator was stopped by the police when he attempted 
to enter the premises.
Other demonstrators held a 7m-long banner 
expressing their indignation over Japan’s detention of the Chinese 
activists who landed on the islands.
Last Monday,
 Kyodo News Agency reported that Tokyo was in the final stages of reaching a deal to buy the islands by the end of this month.
Japanese
 television images showed that a team of surveyors dispatched by Tokyo 
Governor Shintaro Ishihara was surveying the shoreline and waters around
 the uninhabited isles.
The surveyors then released the outcome of their investigation, detailing the geographic composition of the islands.
Apparently, Ishihara called on the Japanese government to build a harbour in the area.
It
 was reported that the administration of Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda 
had agreed to pay two billion yen (RM79mil) for the islands.
The controversial islands are counter claimed by China and Taiwan.
China
 and Taiwan claim that the islands have been a part of Chinese territory
 since at least 1534 until Japan took brief control of it during the 
first Sino-Japanese war (1894-1895), while Japan has rejected claims 
that the islands were under China’s control prior to 1895.
In its editorial, 
China Daily warned that Japan was dicing with danger of leading the Sino-Japanese relations to their worse path.
“Japan
 is escalating tensions between itself and China. Our protests, be it 
official or civil, have fallen on deaf ears with the Japanese 
government.
“The deal for the islands was signed just five days 
after a letter from Japanese Prime Minister Noda to Chinese President Hu
 Jintao was delivered in Beijing on Aug 31. Noda was then said to have 
talked about lowering tensions between the two countries.
“The 
Noda administration now lacks credibility. They said they wanted to 
maintain and manage the islands in a peaceful manner but the islets are 
not part of Japan’s territory,” it said.
The newspaper said while
 China had kept its word to seek common ground on the islands and to 
maintain peace in the area, Japan had no longer shared the same goal.
China had failed to understand Japan’s diplomatic strategy, after all, and should re-look into its stand on the issue, it added.
Xinhua
 news agency slammed the islets purchase deal, saying that it would put 
to test Japan’s credibility over an historical commitment made in 1978 
friendship treaty between Japan and China to resolve the issue.
Renmin
 University’s Centre for East Asia Studies director Huang Dahui said the
 pressure from the Japanese elections and fears of China’s economic 
development were reasons for the move.
“Japan is playing a 
two-faced game with China. What Ishihara and Noda are trying to do share
 the same purpose, which is to nationalise the Diaoyu Islands. China 
should strongly protest,” he told 
Global Times
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