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US nudges China on sea disputes
by Staff Writers
Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei (AFP) July 01, 2013


Japan lawmaker on boat near China dispute islands
Tokyo (AFP) July 01, 2013 - A lawmaker from Japan's ruling party was aboard one of four fishing boats that sailed Monday towards islands at the centre of a bitter dispute with China, the organiser said, as Chinese vessels loomed nearby.

Japan's national broadcaster said one of the Chinese maritime surveillance ships had been within a kilometre (1,000 yards) of the fishing boats, in an incident that could inflame a debilitating international row.

There was no attempt by anyone on board to land on any of the islands, which Japan controls as the Senkakus, but which China claims as the Diaoyus.

"The purpose of dispatching the fishing boats is to fish in the waters," an official from the nationalist Channel Sakura satellite broadcaster told AFP, adding the company's president was aboard one of the boats.

"Most of the people on this mission are fishermen," he said, but noted that Kenji Yamada, a parliamentarian and member of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's Liberal Democratic Party had also taken part in the mission.

The Japanese boats had left the area by the afternoon, he said.

The incident passed off without confrontation but marked a change from recent months, which have seen regular forays by official Chinese ships into the 12-nautical-mile zone regarded as territorial waters.

It has become customary for Japan's coastguard and the Chinese ships to exchange demands that the other side leave the waters, as part of a tussle between Tokyo and Beijing over ownership of the resource-rich islands.

A Japanese foreign ministry official telephoned the Chinese embassy in Tokyo to protest at the presence of the Chinese vessels, the ministry said.

The four ships made a circuit of the largest island in the chain before heading away, Japan's coastguard said.

A territorial row that dates back four decades reignited last September when Tokyo nationalised three islands in the chain, in what it said was a mere administrative change of ownership.

But the incident provoked fury in Beijing, which maintains the Senkakus were illegally snatched by Japan as it built an empire in the half-century before World War II.

Tokyo says it annexed an unclaimed archipelago that showed no signs of ownership.

Commentators say the islands are a potential flashpoint for a military confrontation between Asia's two largest powers.

They say the occasional presence of nationalists from both sides introduces a wild card that increases the risk of a misstep by one of the armed official vessels, which could quickly escalate.

Separately, the Japanese coastguard said a Bahamas-registered marine research vessel, Discoverer2, was in the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of the islands.

The zone is a 200-nautical-mile area around a territory over which the sovereign nation has exclusive rights to exploit resources.

The ship, which is believed to belong to a Chinese oil company, has been spotted in the zone of the islands twice already this year and has been seen lowering wires into the water, a coastguard official said.

"In response to our warnings, the vessel's crew say it is operating with the approval of the Chinese government as the area is part of China's EEZ," he said.

US Secretary of State John Kerry nudged China on Monday to agree a code of conduct to prevent clashes in the South China Sea after the Philippines accused Beijing of a "massive" military build-up.

But Kerry, speaking at Asia-Pacific foreign ministerial talks in the tiny petro-state of Brunei, said after a meeting with his Chinese counterpart that the two Pacific powers were united in their opposition to North Korea's nuclear drive.

A year after a US-backed push for a South China Sea code of conduct broke down acrimoniously, this year's hosts Brunei have instilled a more cordial tone, with China agreeing Sunday to hold talks on establishing such a code.

"We very much hope to see progress on a substantive code of conduct to help ensure stability in this vital region," Kerry said at a meeting with foreign ministers of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Overlapping claims to the South China Sea loom as a flashpoint, with China claiming virtually all of the body of water, drawing accusations from rival claimants the Philippines and Vietnam that it is mounting a creeping takeover of disputed islets.

ASEAN members Brunei and Malaysia, as well as Taiwan, also claim parts of the sea.

Beijing asserts the South China Sea is not Washington's concern, but Kerry insisted the United States saw a "national interest" in ensuring freedom of commerce in a waterway vital to world trade.

He reiterated after talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi that the United States does not take a stand on individual disputes but added it had a "strong interest" in security in the sea.

On Sunday, Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert Del Rosario told his ASEAN colleagues that China had begun a "massive" military build-up in the sea and its actions "pose serious challenges for the region as a whole".

China has been reluctant to reach a code of conduct with the ASEAN bloc, preferring to negotiate individually with each country.

Last year's talks in Cambodia -- a Beijing ally -- ended without a joint statement for the first time due to intra-ASEAN acrimony over the issue.

Kerry, visiting Southeast Asia for the first time since taking over his post in February, was careful to avoid direct criticism of China.

"Our actions are not intended to contain or to counterbalance any one country," he said.

North Korea defiantly carried out its third nuclear weapons test in February and threatened to attack the United States in language that was shrill even by the standards of the reclusive communist state.

Kerry praised China for taking "very firm steps" to show displeasure with North Korea, which has long relied on Beijing for cover.

He also held a joint meeting with the foreign ministers of Japan and South Korea, saying afterwards that the three countries, plus China, firmly opposed North Korea's nuclear weapons drive.

"All of us -- all four of us -- are absolutely united and absolutely firm in our insistence that the future with respect to North Korea must include denuclearisation," Kerry said.

Kerry, who as a senator advocated direct talks with impoverished North Korea, said there was a "better path open" to the isolated regime headed by Kim Jong-Un.

"We want North Korea to understand that the region will be better with the denuclearisation and the possibilities of normal relationships," he said.

South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-Se said the North's development of nuclear weapons would "never be tolerated" and Pyongyang would "face further isolation and dire consequences in the event of provocations".

Kerry, who flew straight to the meetings after an exhaustive four days in the Middle East trying to revive peace talks, also faced tension in Brunei from a usually friendly source -- the European Union.

EU officials have voiced outrage at media reports, allegedly based on information from fugitive former US contractor Edward Snowden, that US intelligence bugged European missions in Washington.

Kerry promised to probe the allegations, but said that it was "not unusual" for governments to seek information in the interests of national security.

The three-day diplomatic gathering wraps up Tuesday with a regional security forum and a meeting of foreign ministers from 26 Asia-Pacific countries and the European Union.

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Chinese media warns of 'counterstrike' in disputed Sea
Beijing (AFP) June 29, 2013
Chinese state-media accused the Philippines of using the ASEAN group of nations as an "accomplice" in the violation of its sovereignty claims in the South China Sea on Saturday, and warned of a potential "counterstrike". The editorial in the overseas edition of the People's Daily, the mouthpiece of China's ruling Communist Party, came as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) was ... read more


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