/ 12 September 2010

China’s raises pressure on Japan, boat protest planned

China’s top-ranked diplomat intensified pressure on Japan over a territorial rift, warning Tokyo on Sunday against making “misjudgements” over the seizure of a Chinese fishing boat in disputed seas.

China’s latest demand marked another diplomatic escalation in the territorial rift between Asia’s two biggest economies and has set back efforts to ease decades of distrust.

State Councillor Dai Bingguo made the warning to Japan’s ambassador in Beijing, Uichiro Niwa, summoned in the early hours to hear China’s call for the release of a Chinese captain and crew whose fishing boat collided with two Japanese coast guard ships in disputed seas last week, Xinhua news agency reported.

Dai advises China’s top leaders on foreign policy and serves on the State Council, or government cabinet, outranking the Foreign Minister within the ruling Communist Party hierarchy.

“[He] solemnly stated the Chinese government’s major concerns and urged Japan not to misjudge the circumstances and to make the wise political choice of immediately returning the Chinese fishermen and their boat,” Xinhua reported.

Chinese media have said ardently patriotic public opinion could become fired up by the dispute and Beijing’s official stand appears partly driven by that pressure.

On Sunday afternoon, around a dozen Chinese protesters were preparing to head towards the disputed East China Sea islets — called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China — on a fishing boat, one of the protest organisers, Li Yiqiang, told Reuters.

He said it would take the boat a couple of days to reach the islets from the eastern city of Xiamen, and they had not sought government approval. Authorities have stopped such trips before.

“We’re going to protest, to make it clear that these islands are China’s and there can be no bending on that,” Li said by telephone.

Japan’s ambassador, Niwa, gave no indication his government was preparing to back down.

“We have maintained the position that we will solemnly handle the case in strict accordance with domestic law”, the ambassador said, according to Japan’s Kyodo news agency, citing the Japanese embassy in Beijing.

China should act “calmly and carefully” to avoid damaging bilateral ties, Niwa said.

On Friday, a Japanese court authorised a 10-day extension in detaining the arrested Chinese boat captain, Zhan Qixiong, whose 14 crew members are being kept on the same island as him.

Japanese prosecutors allege Zhan deliberately struck a patrol ship and obstructed public officers, said Kyodo.

Beijing and Tokyo have so far confined their dispute to diplomatic sparring and avoided measures that would take them back to the icy hostility of several years ago.

Could worry investors
A step in that direction could worry investors, focused on the two countries’ growing trade flows, which reached ¥12,6-trillion ($150,4-billion) in value in the first half of 2010, a jump of 34,5% on the same time last year.

The Japanese ambassador has already been called in by China’s Foreign Ministry three times to hear complaints about the case, which has given an emotive focus to long-running territorial quarrels between Beijing and Tokyo over East China Sea islets.

China has called off planned talks with Japan over an undersea gas bed dispute in another part of the Sea and warned that worse repercussions may follow.

On Saturday, Japan made a formal protest after a Chinese oceanic administration ship tried to stop a Japanese Coast Guard vessel 280km north-west of Japan’s Okinawa island.

On Sunday, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said a Japanese effort to recreate the circumstances of the incident to furnish evidence was “unlawful, ineffective and futile,” according to the Ministry website.

Relations between Beijing and Tokyo have long been dogged by mutual distrust and Chinese bitterness over Japan’s occupation of much of China before and during World War II.

Since big public protests in China against Japan and bitter diplomatic exchanges in 2005 and 2006, both sides have sought to improve ties.

But they have stubborn disagreements over their sea rights.

Tokyo maintains that China’s exploration for natural gas in the East China Sea threatens gas beds extending under what it deems Japan’s maritime zone. China denies there is such a problem and disputes Japan’s definition of the sea boundary.

In 2008, they agreed in principle to solve the dispute by jointly developing gas fields. – Reuters