China ships in disputed waters after Abe’s WWI claim

Agence France-Presse

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Three Chinese coastguard vessels spent two hours in the territorial waters off the Senkakus which China claims and calls the Diaoyus

DISPUTES. Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe warns China against using force rather than abiding international law when it comes to disputed islands in the East China Sea. Photo by Agence France-Presse

TOKYO, Japan – Chinese ships sailed through disputed waters off Tokyo-controlled islands on Monday, January 27, days after Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe caused an international stir by comparing Sino-Japanese relations with the run-up to World War I.

Three Chinese coastguard vessels spent around two hours in the 12-nautical-mile territorial waters off one of the Senkakus, which China claims and calls the Diaoyus, Japan’s coastguard said.

China’s State Oceanic Adminstration said 3 China Coast Guard vessels “continued their patrol in the territorial waters around Diaoyu Islands” on Monday, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

The latest patrol came as Abe was in New Delhi, where he and Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh affirmed plans to strengthen defense cooperation, including conducting joint maritime exercises on a “regular basis with increased frequency.”

His 3-day visit to India is being keenly watched by China, analysts say. Beijing is sometimes uneasy about what it sees as an attempt by the US-backed Japan to encircle it.

Beijing also has an often fractious relationship with Delhi, partly because of a border dispute that erupted into a brief war in 1962. India is keen to burnish friendships in the region to offset its neighbor’s growing might.

Abe was in Delhi days after he drew a comparison between Japan and China’s relations and those of Britain and Germany as they stumbled towards World War I.

For its part, Beijing has sought to conjure the specter of Nazism by urging Abe to emulate Germany’s post-war contrition.

Chinese state-owned ships and aircraft have approached the Senkakus on and off to demonstrate Beijing’s territorial claims, especially after Japan nationalized some of the islands in September 2012. – Rappler.com

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