TOKYO: Six Chinese ships sailed into waters around a disputed archipelago on
Friday, with Beijing saying they were there for "law enforcement"
around islands Japan nationalised earlier this week.
The move -- dubbed
"unprecedented" by Tokyo -- came as it was reported Japanese
nationals had been physically attacked in China, marking the latest stage in a
deteriorating row between Asia's two biggest economies.
Japanese living or visiting China
were warned to take extra precautions after assaults and harassment were
reported to the consulate in Shanghai, a base for Japanese businesses and a
popular tourist destination.
Tokyo summoned the Chinese
ambassador to protest what it insisted was an incursion into territorial waters
around islands it controls, called Senkaku, but claimed by Beijing, which
refers to the islets as Diaoyu.
However, China was resolute, with
the foreign ministry issuing a forthright statement claiming the boats were
patrolling sovereign territory.
"Two Chinese surveillance
ship fleets have arrived at waters around the Diaoyu Islands and adjacent
islands on September 14, 2012 to start patrol and law enforcement," the
statement said.
"These law enforcement and
patrol activities are designed to demonstrate China's jurisdiction over the
islands and safeguard its maritime interests."
Japan's coastguard said the ships
had all left the area by around 1:20 pm (0420 GMT), approximately seven hours
after the first vessel had arrived.
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary
Osamu Fujimura said the foreign ministry summoned China's ambassador, Cheng
Yonghua, to lodge a protest.
"We understand that (the
dispatch of) six ships is surely an unprecedented case," he told a press
conference.
Fujimura said Yonghua had
reiterated Beijing's claims to the islands in the East China Sea, which lie
around 400 kilometres (250 miles) from the Okinawan capital of Naha and 200
kilometres from Taiwan.
Japan urged "that China do
its utmost -- above all else -- to secure the safety of Japanese nationals in
China", he said.
Fujimura's comments come as the
Japanese consulate in Shanghai reported a series of physical attacks.
"A group was dining late at
night, and they were harassed and assaulted by Chinese," said a statement
on the consulate's website.
The consulate said bottles were
thrown at some Japanese, and drinks and food were poured over others, while one
person was reported having a pair of glasses broken.
In two of the incidents the
assailants asked "Are you Japanese?" before acting, a Japanese
diplomat in Shanghai told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Tokyo's foreign ministry has
warned its nationals to be aware of anti-Japanese demonstrations and to avoid drawing
attention to themselves.
The embassy in Beijing said
Japanese should avoid approaching the building, where protests have been
reported, unless absolutely necessary.
Relations between the two
countries -- often rocky because of a difficult history -- have worsened since
pro-Beijing activists were arrested and deported after a landing on one of the
islands in August.
They were followed days later by
Japanese nationalists, who raised their flag there.
Protests broke out in China and
have continued since Japan on Tuesday announced it had nationalised three of
the islands in the chain. It already owns another and leases the fifth.
The purchase was intended at
least partially to head off an attempt to buy them by Tokyo's provocative
Governor Shintaro Ishihara, who charged Japan was not doing enough to protect
its territory.
Commentators say Prime Minister
Yoshihiko Noda's solution -- nationalising the islands and continuing its
policy of doing nothing with them -- was an attempt to navigate between rising
nationalism at home and China's growing assertiveness on the oceans.
But Beijing's reaction has been
sharper than many analysts expected. Some observers have pointed to the
forthcoming leadership change in China's Communist Party and say the islands issue
is being used as a way to distract public attention from the less-than-smooth
transition.
The People's Daily, the party
mouthpiece, on Friday called Tokyo's actions a violation of China's territorial
sovereignty and an affront to its citizens.
"Is Japan prepared to pay
the price for its vicious actions?" the commentary in the paper's domestic
edition said. "They will be regarded as an invasion of China's inherent
territory and thus China will resolutely strike back."
- AFP/fa
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