China praises 'wise' Japan move in islands' dispute
18 August BBC
China has praised Japan's "wise" decision to free a group of
activists who sailed to a disputed island chain, in a state media
commentary.The article on Xinhua news agency's website said the speedy
action had averted the deterioration in relations.
The activists sailed to the islands, known as Senkaku in Japan and
Diaoyu in China, from Hong Kong in a protest aimed at promoting Chinese
sovereignty. Some were deported, while others agreed to sail back.The
islands are the subject of a long-running sovereignty dispute.China
claims the uninhabited chain has been a part of its territory since
ancient times. But Japan says it took control of the archipelago in the
late 1890s after making sure they were uninhabited.
Although Xinhua's commentary praised Japan for freeing the activists
so quickly, it also added some strident criticism.
"[Japan's] disrespect and insulting moves towards neighbouring
nations have brewed disaster, and normalisation of China-Japan relations
40 years ago only took place after its post-war reflection," the
commentary said.
"Now the country obviously needs to return to that reflection and
reconsider how it can get along with Asian countries."
Some of the activists arrived back in Hong Kong to a hero's welcome,
and immediately promised to return to the islands.They were arrested
when five of the landed on the islands. The last time any non-Japanese
visited the chain was in 2004 when another group of Chinese activists
tried a similar stunt. |