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China, Malaysia to hold joint military drills
by Staff Writers
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) Oct 30, 2013


China foreign minister in 'candid' talks with Japanese delegates
Beijing (AFP) Oct 30, 2013 - Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi held "candid" talks last week with a visiting delegation from Tokyo, the government said Wednesday after a report that the encounter involved a former Japanese premier.

The "unofficial" meeting took place Saturday, foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said at a regular briefing.

It comes amid mounting diplomatic tensions between the two over disputed islands in the East China Sea, and with Beijing warning that any bid to shoot down its drones would constitute "an act of war", while Tokyo has accused it of jeopardising peace.

China has also been critical of Japan's new government, led by hawkish Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has advocated that Tokyo take a more assertive stance on the territorial dispute.

The meeting involved "senior members of the Japanese delegation attending the 9th Beijing-Tokyo forum", Hua said.

"The two sides had a candid exchange of views on China-Japan relations," she said.

"Wang Yi elaborated China's policies towards Japan and urged the Japanese government to treat the problems seriously that are hampering China-Japan relations."

Hua added that Wang "also hopes that the eminent persons from all walks of life in Japan could work hard to improve China-Japan relations".

She did not mention Yasuo Fukuda, the former Japanese prime minister, who met Wang according to Japan's Asahi Shimbun newspaper.

Fukuda, who led Japan for a year from September 2007, said in April that he briefly met Chinese President Xi Jinping at an international conference in southern China, but they did not discuss Japan-China relations.

Ties between the two countries have remained strained since a long-simmering territorial dispute over a group of islands in the East China Sea intensified last year.

Japan administers the unoccupied islands, which it calls Senkaku. China, which also claims them, refers to them as Diaoyu. The waters around them are considered potentially rich in natural resources.

Wang has extensive experience with Japan. He was China's ambassador to Tokyo from 2004 to 2007, was previously stationed there as a diplomat and speaks Japanese.

China and Malaysia will hold their first-ever joint military exercises next year, the Southeast Asian nation's defence minister said Wednesday, despite their rival claims to the tense South China Sea.

The announcement by Hishammuddin Hussein, who is in Beijing to meet Chinese military leaders, follows a visit to Kuala Lumpur earlier this month by China's President Xi Jinping, in which the two countries pledged closer ties.

"Malaysia and China are expected to launch our first joint exercise in 2014 after the Memorandum of Understanding on Defence Cooperation was signed in 2005," Hishammuddin said in a statement sent to AFP.

The statement gave no details on the planned drills such as their location, scale, or which military branches would be involved.

A Malaysian defence ministry official confirmed they would be the first-ever drills between the two countries' armed forces.

Hishammuddin, who met his counterpart General Chang Wanquan in China, also said he invited Chang to visit the Malaysian naval base of Mawilla 2 in the South China Sea on the island of Borneo.

The visit would be aimed at launching a "direct-contact" relationship with China's fleet in the South China Sea.

The resource-rich waterway has become a potential military flashpoint in recent years as Beijing has pressed its claim to nearly all of it.

Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines, Vietnam and Taiwan also have various claims -- some overlapping -- to the sea, a vital thoroughfare for world trade and shipping traffic.

The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), of which Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Vietnam are members, has sought to present a united front against China.

It was not immediately clear how Malaysia's warming defence ties with China would be received in other ASEAN capitals.

While the Philippines and Vietnam have been involved in tense confrontations with China over the issue, Malaysia has sought to keep a lower profile in the dispute.

In recent years, China has become Malaysia's top export market and a vital trade buffer against the world economic volatility, and their commerce and overall relationship has strengthened.

Xi's visits to Indonesia and Malaysia and his attendance at a regional summit in Bali took on added significance after President Barack Obama cancelled his own plans to visit due to the recent US government shutdown.

The episode symbolically highlighted the two giants' rivalry for influence in the Asia-Pacific and raised questions over Washington's promise to refocus its attention on the region.

China agreed this year to discuss with ASEAN an eventual binding set of rules to prevent accidental conflict at sea, but analysts say Beijing will never give up its territorial claims and they predict maritime tensions will continue to simmer.

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