China demands Japan release activists | China Daily
Li Xiaokun, Zhang Yunbi and Zhou Wa, China Daily, August 16, 2012
Beijing urged Tokyo yesterday to
immediately and unconditionally release 14 Chinese nationals held over a
landing on islands belonging to China.
In a meeting with Japan's ambassador to
Beijing and a phone call with a Japanese official, Vice-Minister of
Foreign Affairs Fu Ying "demanded that Japan ensure the safety of 14
Chinese nationals and immediately and unconditionally release them", the
Foreign Ministry said on its website.
Fu also "made solemn representations on
Japan's unlawful detention of Chinese nationals on the Diaoyu Islands",
the ministry website said.
Tension between Japan and its Asian
neighbours rose sharply yesterday, the 67th anniversary of Japan's World
War II surrender, after Japanese ministers visited a shrine in Tokyo,
against the advice of their prime minister, that honours war criminals.
As news broke yesterday of the arrests
and the shrine visit, a group of swimmers from the Republic of Korea (or
South Korea) made it to the Dokdo Islands. The islands are called
Takeshima in Japan and Tokyo disputes their sovereignty.
How Tokyo handles the detained activists will determine if the situation escalates, experts said.
It seems the administration of Japanese
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda is trying to avoid triggering a more
serious response from Beijing, they said.
Japan arrested the activists on suspicion
of "illegal entry" after they landed on the Diaoyu Islands, according
to Okinawa police.
Two activists, who also landed on the
islands, returned to their fishing boat before they were arrested, the
police said. Hong Kong-based Phoenix TV said the vessel is now under the control of the Japanese coastguard.
"Those arrested may be transferred to the
Immigration Bureau of Japan later and sent back to Hong Kong by the
Immigration Bureau," a spokesman from the coastguard told Xinhua.
Despite the detention, the Hong
Kong-based Action Committee for Defending the Diaoyu Islands which
arranged the trip, said "this is the most successful attempt in a
decade" to reach the Diaoyu Islands.
Several of the 14 men on board the
vessel, which departed from Hong Kong over the weekend, jumped into the
sea and made it ashore at 5:30 p.m. local time. As soon as they reached
land they sang the national anthem.
Waiting for them on the island were about
40 members of the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force. They took down
national flags that the activists had planted firmly.
The group said its boat had been rammed
by the coastguard and subjected to water cannon. The front of the vessel
had been damaged, they said.
Hong Kong's Chief Executive Leung
Chun-ying said yesterday that the Hong Kong SAR government has been
watching developments closely. He pledged to provide all possible
assistance to Hong Kong residents involved in the action.
"Our nation and the people of Hong Kong
always held a clear and sharp position on the sovereignty of the Diaoyu
Islands. The islands have belonged to China for centuries," he said.
Chen Miau-tak, chairman of the Hong
Kong-based Action Committee for Defending the Diaoyu Islands, said he
believed the smooth departure of the Hong Kong boat reflected an
"attitude of support" from the Hong Kong government.
The last time Hong Kong vessels entered waters off the Diaoyu Islands was in 2006.
Hong Kong political parties and social
groups protested yesterday against Japan's claim on the islands and tore
apart paper Japanese flags.
There are also similar protests on the mainland and in the South Korea against Japan.
The landing on the islands was a major
topic, forwarded more than 4,000,000 times, on weibo. "How Japan deals
with the activists will reveal Tokyo's attitude," said Yang Bojiang, a
professor of Japanese studies at the University of International
Relations in Beijing.
"It seems that Japan does not want to trigger a full-scale conflict with China on the issue."
But if Japan brings charges against the activists then that would signal an escalation, Yang said.
Jia Xiudong, a senior researcher on
international affairs at the China Institute of International Studies,
said Japan should deal with the situation maturely.
There has been a marked increase in
tension since outspoken right-wing Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara
released his plan in April to "purchase" the islands.
The situation escalated yesterday in Tokyo when two cabinet ministers visited the controversial Yasukuni Shrine.
Yuichiro Hata, Japan's transport and
tourism minister and Jin Matsubara, the president of Japan's National
Public Safety Commission, snubbed their prime minister by attending
ceremonies at the shrine honouring Japan's war dead, including 14
Class-A World War II war criminals. Noda said when he took office last
year that no cabinet members would visit the shrine.
China and the South Korea, both victims
of Japan's aggression during World War II, harshly slammed the move.
More than 35 million Chinese people were killed or wounded by the
Japanese military during its invasion from 1937 to 1945.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang urged Japan to keep its promise of reflecting on its history.
He said the crux of shrine situation is whether Japan respects the feelings of people in Asia.
Seoul earlier criticised the visit. South
Korean President Lee Myung-Bak said recently the Japanese emperor had
to apologise for wartime atrocities if he wants to visit.
On Aug. 10, Lee became the first South
Korea president to step on the disputed islands in the Sea of Japan.
Japan recalled its ambassador in Seoul immediately. A group of South
Korean protesters swam across the sea to the islands yesterday.
The resentment toward Japan's war crimes
was also echoed in Japan, with a group of family members of war dead
protesting against the shrine visit and also against Ishihara yesterday.
The visit was the first by cabinet members of a Democratic Party government. The party came to power in 2009.
Analysts say the move will embarrass Noda.
"We have caused tremendous damage and
pain to many countries, particularly the Asian people, during the war.
We deeply regret that and sincerely mourn for those who were sacrificed
and their relatives," Noda said yesterday at a sombre official ceremony.
"We will not repeat the same mistake."
Kahon Chan in Hong Kong contributed to this story.
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