China and Japan clash over disputed territory | The Phnom Penh Post
Bridget Di Certo and David Boyle, 12 July 2012
Amidst a week of predictable discussion about the South China Sea, a
different territorial sea dispute dominated the sidelines of the ASEAN
conference in Phnom Penh yesterday.
Japan lodged a protest with
China yesterday against the entry of Chinese patrol ships into waters
near disputed islands in the East China Sea.
The islands,
claimed by Beijing and Tokyo as well as Taipei, are located near rich
fishing grounds and potentially huge oil and gas reserves.
In a
snap sidelines meet this afternoon, the Chinese and Japanese foreign
ministers held off-campus discussions at the InterContinental Hotel.
The
Chinese delegation released a statement directly after the meeting
emphasising that the disputed islands – known as Senkaku in Japan and
Diaoyu in China – and “their affiliated islets have always been China’s
territory since ancient times, over which China has indisputable
sovereignty”.
The Chinese statement said that Chinese foreign
minister Yang Jiechi “urged Japan to adhere to relevant agreements and
understanding between the two sides in good faith, return to the right
path of managing differences through dialogue and consultation with the
Chinese side”.
At a Tokyo press conference, Japanese chief
cabinet secretary Osamu Fujimura said: “It is clear that the Senkaku
islands are inherently Japanese territory from a historical point of
view and in terms of international law and that they are under the
effective control of Japan.”
Naoka Saiki, deputy press secretary
at the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told the Post that the
meeting yesterday afternoon between the two foreign ministers had
resulted in no resolution at this point.
“Minister of Foreign
Affairs Koichiro Gemba lodged a strong protest against Foreign Minister
Yang Jiechi of China on this incident,” she said, adding that Gemba also
stated the importance of maintaining the bilateral relationships
between the two countries.
Under the chairmanship of China’s
close ally Cambodia, ASEAN has stipulated that the production of a Code
of Conduct for the South China Sea will have Chinese involvement at
every step, despite opposition from the Philippines at the ASEAN Summit
in April.
In the annual joint communiqué of the foreign ministers
in 2011, the 10-member group made it clear that a region code of
conduct was an ASEAN-only issue, with “intensive discussion in ASEAN” to
follow.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment