Today
is the 81st anniversary of the Japanese invasion of
northeastern China and has seen further demonstrations in China
China
warns of 'further actions' in Japan island dispute
China’s
defense minister said Tuesday his country reserved the right to take
“further actions” to resolve a territorial dispute with Japan but
voiced hope the feud would be settled through diplomacy.
19
September, 2012
Beijing
is following the situation in the East China Sea closely “and we
reserve rights to further actions”, General Liang Guanglie said
through an interpreter at a joint news conference with U.S. Defense
Secretary Leon Panetta.
“Of
course, that being said, we still hope for a peaceful and negotiated
solution to this issue,” Liang said when asked if China would use
its military power in the crisis.
The
islets, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, are
uninhabited but situated in rich fishing waters and said to sit atop
valuable natural resources. They are controlled by Japan but claimed
by China and Taiwan.
The
general blamed Tokyo for the spike in tensions, saying the
archipelago has belonged to China for centuries, dating back to the
Ming dynasty.
“The
current escalation of tension over this dispute was totally caused by
the Japanese side,” he said.
Washington
has a security alliance with Tokyo and Panetta appealed to both sides
to lower the temperature.
“With
respect to these current tensions, we are urging calm and restraint
by all sides,” the U.S. defence chief told the same press
conference.
“It
is no country’s interest for this situation to escalate into
conflict that would undermine peace and stability in this very
important region.
“This
has been my consistent message throughout the week,” said Panetta,
who stopped in the Japanese capital before flying to Beijing on
Monday.
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