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Japan ambassador targeted in China amid protests

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Japan ambassador targeted in China amid protests - Yahoo! News

The car carrying Japan's ambassador to China was targeted in Beijing on Monday by a man who ripped off the vehicle's national flag, prompting a protest by Tokyo, Japanese officials said.

The incident followed widespread anti-Japan demonstrations in China over a disputed East China Sea island chain known in China as Diaoyu and in Japan as Senkaku.

The ambassador, Uichiro Niwa, was in the vehicle at the time but was not hurt in the incident, said a Japanese foreign ministry official in Tokyo.

An official at the Japanese embassy told AFP the Japanese flag, which identifies the ambassador's car, was taken away by the man but the vehicle was not damaged in the afternoon incident.

"At least two cars let the ambassador's car stop on the road and a Chinese man took the national flag," he said.

Chinese authorities later said they were "seriously investigating" the incident, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

The agency quoted the Foreign Ministry as saying the Chinese government always conscientiously fulfils the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations to protect the safety of foreign embassies and personnel.

Diplomatic vehicles in China are also identified by special car plates but typically only ambassadors' vehicles carry national flags.

A Japanese diplomat later registered a protest with the Chinese foreign ministry in a meeting, demanding an investigation and prevention of future such incidents, the embassy official said.

No arrests have been made, he said, adding the embassy has not warned Japanese nationals in China following the incident.

Tensions between Japan and China flared earlier this month after pro-Beijing activists who landed on one of the disputed islands were arrested by Japanese authorities and later deported.

Around a dozen nationalists raised Japanese flags on the island just days later.

Thousands of Chinese citizens in more than 20 cities have protested over the last two weeks, which saw Japanese businesses, restaurants and cars targeted in some cities.
 
(Reuters) - The Japanese government on Monday refused to let Tokyo metropolitan authorities land on islands at the centre of a territorial dispute with China, a move aimed at defusing tensions that led to biggest anti-Japan protests in years.

Tensions over the islands flared in mid-August, when the Japanese coast guard detained Chinese activists who sailed from Hong Kong and landed on the island. Tokyo sent the group back home without charging them to calm things down, but a landing of Japanese nationalists just days later led to another flare-up.

Despite close economic ties, bitter memories of Japanese militarism run deep in China and South Korea. The territorial disputes show how the region has failed to resolve differences nearly seven decades after the end of World War Two.

full story>Japan blocks landing on disputed islands to defuse China tensions | Reuters



The Japanese government is backing down in the Diaoyu dispute and take a more diplomatic approach. A very sensible move but it certainly doesn't sit well with the extreme right nationalists.
 
Ambassadors have diplomatic immunity ...??


That's a non issue because the Ambassador is not the who commits a crime here. I'm sure the perpetrator(s) will be caught and be dealt with.
 
The heat is rising between Japan and China, and some are faning the tension.

Tokyo Governor Talks Tough on Isles
Updated August 27, 2012, 10:01 p.m. ET Wallstreet Journal Asia

WO-AK896_ISHIHA_DV_20120827171917.jpg


TOKYO—As Japan's government is trying to smooth a quarrel with China over the sovereignty of a set of islands that lies between them, the man who ignited the current flare-up shows no sign of turning down the heat.

"We must build a telecommunications base, a port, a meteorological station'' on the disputed islands, said Shintaro Ishihara, the governor of Tokyo and a well-known nationalist, whose controversial proposal to have the city buy the islands has ballooned into one of the summer's hottest diplomatic brawls.

"Without such things, we won't have effective control of them,'' Tokyo's popular four-term governor said in a recent interview.

Mr. Ishihara's plans are proving awkward for the Japanese government, which is struggling to ease tensions over those islands, which lie between Okinawa and Taiwan and are called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. The islands are controlled by Japan, but claimed by China and Taiwan as well.

Although the islands' sovereignty is the focus of periodic spats between Japan and China—most recently in 2010—the issue had been off the radar until April, when Mr. Ishihara said Tokyo was in talks to buy the islands from a private Japanese owner, and started raising donations for their purchase.

As of mid-August, Tokyo had collected around ¥1.5 billion ($19 million), Mr. Ishihara said.

Mr. Ishihara's move prompted the Japanese government to step in and say it would buy the islands instead. China has said it won't allow the land to be purchased by anybody.

Over the past few weeks, groups of activists from Hong Kong and Japan have made unauthorized landings on the islands to push competing claims, sparking harsh rhetoric from both sides and anti-Japanese demonstrations in China.

The Japanese government Monday moved to head off further steps by Mr. Ishihara, rejecting the city of Tokyo's request to land on the islands for a survey to determine their value. The city plans to go ahead and survey the islands anyhow from the sea, and Mr. Ishihara on Friday said he himself would lead a second survey team to land there in October—with or without permission.

In the interview, Mr. Ishihara said that his quest for a foothold on the disputed islands is driven by a fear of China, which is building up its maritime forces and has been increasingly assertive over territorial claims in the Pacific in recent years.

"Think of Tibet,'' Mr. Ishihara said. "They don't have a country. They don't have a leader. They've even lost their culture.…I don't want Japan to end up as a second Tibet.''

To bolster Japan's claims, Mr. Ishihara is proposing that either Tokyo or the national government build facilities on the islands—now uninhabited—including a fishing port, a weather station and a base for radio transmissions.

"If worst comes to worst, we would probably station Japanese Self Defense Forces there,'' he said, referring to Japan's version of the military, whose activities are constitutionally limited to defense.

Mr. Ishihara pooh-poohed the idea that relations with China will improve if the islands are left alone, pointing out that the Hong Kong activists that landed there a few weeks ago threw a brick at a Japanese coast-guard vessel that was trying to prevent them from approaching.

People say "if Ishihara buys [the islands], who knows what will happen. But if the country buys them, it won't do anything, so there won't be any friction with China,'' said Mr. Ishihara. "Well, there will be friction if things continue like this.''

Throughout the interview, in addition to referring to China by the standard Japanese term "Chugoku," Mr. Ishihara often used the word "Shina," a derogatory term used during Japan's occupation of much of China.

But Mr. Ishihara took a much less aggressive tone on another set of islands, known as the Liancourt Rocks, whose sovereignty is now the subject of strained relations between Japan and South Korea.

Tensions started rising in early August, after South Korean president Lee Myung-bak visited the Korea-controlled islands, called Dokdo in Korean and Takeshima in Japanese.

The incident sparked a still-escalating diplomatic battle between Japan and South Korea, featuring aggressive rhetoric, canceled bilateral meetings and threats by Japan to take the matter to an international court.

Mr. Ishihara said that the Korean control over the islands dated back to the period after Japan lost World War II and that it is tough to overturn that now. "Too much time has passed since then," said Mr. Ishihara. "It's very unfortunate but it's partly a done deal now.''
 
Throughout the interview, in addition to referring to China by the standard Japanese term "Chugoku," Mr. Ishihara often used the word "Shina," a derogatory term used during Japan's occupation of much of China.

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/china-...rgeted-china-amid-protests.html#ixzz254uAxWlt

Japanese inferiority complex. China has its own name中国, so Japan named its province 中国,China has another name九州,so Japan named its province 九州. so many same things in Japan. they want to own everything china owns.
 
Throughout the interview, in addition to referring to China by the standard Japanese term "Chugoku," Mr. Ishihara often used the word "Shina," a derogatory term used during Japan's occupation of much of China.'
This is just unacceptable. No governor of any city of any kind of country should refer to a fellow nation in such a derogatory way. I think this fellow is suffering from a serious case of ********
 
This is just unacceptable. No governor of any city of any kind of country should refer to a fellow nation in such a derogatory way. I think this fellow is suffering from a serious case of ********

thats the problem with japan, never really changed from ww2. they actually have governers that still claim Nanjing didn't happen. imagine for a second if a German governor declared that he doesn't believe the holocaust happened. then imagine the german government goes yearly to worship a shrine to hitler. thats the kind of stuff that the japanese government does, now you know why no east asian like the japanese much while europe has forgiven germany
 
China has Beijing (Northern Capital) and Nanjing (Southern Capital) so Japan has Tokyo (Eastern Capital).

you know We chinese should strip the name 东京 Tokyo (Eastern Capital) from Japan, why should we allow them to use Han character to name their city...let them find some alien name for that.
 
The reasons why Germany enjoys a good relationship with Russia and the rest of EU are: 1) After WW2 they didn't go into isolation, they sought ties asap with these countries trying to improve trade. 2) They apologized for the holocaust and the invasion of the involved EU countries. 3) They don't lie about their role during WW 2 in their history textbooks. 4) No territorial disputes with its neighbors.

After Japan lost the war they simply ignored China and East Asia, was isolated, occupied by America and only focused on rebuilding their own country. This shows that they are very proud of themselves and saw other Asians inferior. They didn't apologize for their war crimes against Asians and even teach their children a different version of what actually happened during that war not to mention the denial of the Nanking massacre. Japanese love to portray themselves as victims of the atom bombs and you can still clearly see that as many Japanese people still questioning the use of these WMD since they claim they were already losing the battle against USA. They think it was unnecessary for the Americans to drop these 2 bombs on a losing nation. Also visiting the war criminal shrine isn't a smart thing to do. Though China has established trade with Japan for quite some time already the mood can easily change when it comes to the territorial dispute. Not just with China but also with Russia and South Korea.

China and Japan enjoyed special relationship as their culture was strongly influenced by China way back then. Their decision to invade China destroyed the strong ties we once had. If Japan can only learn from Germany.
 
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