China sends ships to islands purchased by Japan

  • 12 dead as Philippine troops clash with militants

    12 dead as Philippine troops clash with militants

    AFP News
    12 dead as Philippine troops clash with militants

    Twelve people were killed in the Philippines on Saturday as troops clashed with a militant group blamed for the country's deadliest terror attacks, the military said.

  • Paulo Coelho tells Pinoys: 'Your souls lead to the gates of heaven'

    Paulo Coelho tells Pinoys: 'Your souls lead to the gates of heaven'

    Yahoo! Southeast Asia Newsroom
    Paulo Coelho tells Pinoys: 'Your souls lead to the gates of heaven'

    After an American novelist drew ire by calling Manila the "gates of hell," a popular Brazilian author pacified Filipinos anger by telling them they knew the way to heaven.

  • Slain Taiwanese was 'good to Filipino fishermen'

    Slain Taiwanese was 'good to Filipino fishermen'

    ANN
    Slain Taiwanese was 'good to Filipino fishermen'

    Taipei (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) - Filipinos in Pintung county, where the Taiwanese fisherman fatally shot by Philippine coast guards lived, say they feel no threat from local residents.

  • Polls unfriendly to voters with disabilities: Lente

    Tinig Ng Botante

    By MELISSA LUZ LOPEZ, VERA Files DESPITE laws ensuring accessibility, the May 13 elections failed to make polling centers barrier-free for persons with disabilities, said poll watchdog Legal Network for Truthful Elections (Lente). “Nandoon ang batas (para sa mga PWD), … Continue reading →

  • Albay governor’s ‘bangka’ good to go

    Tinig Ng Botante

    By Reynard Magtoto, VERA Files Legazpi City—After assuring Bicolanos that no one will be left behind in Albay’s surge to prosperity, reelected Gov. Joey Sarte Salceda said he is ready to “paddle the boat” to fulfilling his vision for the … Continue reading →

China has dispatched two patrol ships to "assert its sovereignty" over islands at the centre of a row with Japan, state media said Tuesday, as Tokyo completed its purchase of the disputed territory.

The two marine surveillance ships had reached the waters around the Diaoyu islands -- known in Japan as the Senkaku islands -- and would "take actions pending the development of the situation," the Xinhua news agency said.

The arrival came as the Japanese government announced it had completed its planned purchase of the islands, which lie in a strategically important shipping area with valuable mineral resources thought to be nearby.

"This should cause no problem for Japan's ties with other countries and regions," said Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura.

"We have absolutely no desire for any repercussions as far as Japan-China relations are concerned. It is important that we avoid misunderstanding and unforeseen problems," he told reporters.

Beijing had earlier summoned the Japanese ambassador and lodged a strong protest over Tokyo's move to purchase the islands, while vowing to take counter-measures.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said the islands were "an inherent part of China's territory" and vowed his country would "never ever yield an inch" on its sovereignty.

However, the ships China dispatched were from the State Oceanic Authority and not military vessels and analysts downplayed the significance of the move, saying the deal may even allow Beijing and Tokyo to temper tensions.

"That some patrol vessels were deployed in the vicinity of the islands was almost inevitable, but now, at least, there is no longer a risk that some nationalist Japanese politician would gain control of the islands," said China expert Jonathan Holslag.

"Most decision-makers in Beijing are relieved that the Japanese national government bought the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands," added Holslag, head of research at the Brussels Institute of Contemporary China Studies.

On Sunday, Chinese President Hu Jintao urged Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda not to go ahead with the purchase in brief talks held on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific economic summit in Vladivostok.

"China-Japan relations have recently faced a severe situation due to the Diaoyu Island issue," a foreign ministry statement quoted Hu as telling Noda.

"Japan must fully recognise the gravity of the situation and should not make wrong decisions."

Officials at China's State Oceanic Administration, which dispatched the two surveillance ships, were not immediately available to clarify to AFP whether the vessels were armed.

Often testy Japan-China ties took a turn for the worse in August when pro-Beijing activists landed on one of the islands.

They were arrested by Japanese authorities and deported. Days later about a dozen Japanese nationalists raised their country's flag on the same island, Uotsurijima, prompting protests in cities across China.

Japan's government currently leases four islands and owns a fifth. It does not allow people to visit and has a policy of not building anything there.

State television and all major Chinese dailies in China Tuesday highlighted Beijing's condemnation of the purchase. Around 200 people in eastern Shandong province took to the streets Tuesday to protest, carrying banners and singing China's national anthem.

The islands, which lie around 200 kilometres (125 miles) from Taiwan and 2,000 kilometres from Tokyo, are also claimed by Taipei, which strongly protested the Japanese move on Tuesday.

"We strongly demand that the Japanese government revokes this move," Taiwan's foreign minister Timothy Yang told reporters in Taipei.

"Japan's unilateral and illegal action cannot change the fact that the Republic of China (Taiwan's official name) owns the Diaoyu islands."

Loading...

Editor’s note:Yahoo! Philippines encourages responsible comments that add dimension to the discussion. No bashing or hate speech, please. You can express your opinion without slamming others or making derogatory remarks.

Odd Stories

  • Austrian overcomes fear of heights to aim for slackline record

    Austrian overcomes fear of heights to aim for slackline record

    Reuters - 8 hours ago
    Austrian overcomes fear of heights to aim for slackline record

    FRANKFURT, May 25 - An Austrian man tip-toed along a line strung 185 meters (607 feet) off the ground in Frankfurt on Saturday, attempting to set a new world record for "highlining" despite his fear of heights. Reinhard Kleindl, 32, used only his arms to balance as he walked twice along a 30-metre-long polyester rope anchored to the two wings of Frankfurt's U-shaped skyscraper Tower 185 above hundreds of cheering supporters. ...

  • Prosecutor in Berlusconi sex trial receives mail with bullets

    Prosecutor in Berlusconi sex trial receives mail with bullets

    Reuters - Thu, May 23, 2013
    Prosecutor in Berlusconi sex trial receives mail with bullets

    MILAN (Reuters) - The prosecutor in former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's sex trial has received a series of anonymous letters of threats, including one with two bullets, Milan's chief prosecutor said on Thursday. The letters against Ilda Boccassini have become more frequent since she requested a six-year jail sentence and a lifetime ban on holding public office for Berlusconi, Edmondo Bruti Liberati said. ...

  • College student snares record long Burmese python near Miami

    College student snares record long Burmese python near Miami

    Reuters - Wed, May 22, 2013
    College student snares record long Burmese python near Miami

    By Barbara Liston ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - An 18-foot, 8-inch Burmese python set a record for the longest snake ever captured in South Florida, where the exotic species has taken up residence. College student Jason Leon snared the female python in a rural area southeast of Miami earlier this month, when he saw part of it sticking out from brush along the roadside, said Carli Segelson, a spokeswoman for the state's Fish and Wildlife Commission. ...

  • A gnome grows in Chelsea - at the flower show, that is

    A gnome grows in Chelsea - at the flower show, that is

    Reuters - Tue, May 21, 2013
    A gnome grows in Chelsea - at the flower show, that is

    By Paul Casciato LONDON (Reuters) - Some spectators at London's Chelsea Flower Show wouldn't be caught dead with one in the trunk of their Bentley, but garden gnomes have turned up at the show's 100th edition this year, for charity. The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS), which runs Chelsea in the grounds of the Christopher Wren-built Royal Hospital Chelsea, has lifted a ban on the ceramic figures with floppy hats and beards in order to raise funds for an RHS charity that supports the use of

  • Marijuana waste helps turn pot-eating pigs into tasty pork roast

    Marijuana waste helps turn pot-eating pigs into tasty pork roast

    Reuters - Tue, May 21, 2013
    Marijuana waste helps turn pot-eating pigs into tasty pork roast

    By Jonathan Kaminsky OLYMPIA, Washington (Reuters) - With Washington state about to embark on a first-of-its-kind legal market for recreational marijuana, the budding ranks of new cannabis growers face a quandary over what to do with the excess stems, roots and leaves from their plants. Susannah Gross, who owns a five-acre farm north of Seattle, is part of a group experimenting with a solution that seems to make the most of marijuana's appetite-enhancing properties - turning weed waste into pig

  • Island politics takes a new shape VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Pablo A. Tariman,VERA Files Battered by typhoons, ruled by two generations of politicians and largely influenced by the Church which has lured  many a young islander to take up priesthood for many decades, Catanduanes – the 12th largest island … Continue reading →

  • Aze Ong takes crochet to the next level VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Elizabeth Lolarga, VERA Files Photos courtesy of Aze Ong She is not that traditional craftswoman doing crochet while on a rocking chair with the television set on. She does not follow a pattern from a catalogue. Free-spirited Aze Ong … Continue reading →

  • The joy of chamber music according to Albert Tiu VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Pablo A. Tariman, VERA Files Chamber music enthusiasts will have another special treat when Singapore-based Filipino pianist Albert Tiu teams up with Belgian clarinetist Marcel Luxen Saturday, June 1 at the Ayala Museum courtesy of the MCO Foundation. A … Continue reading →

  • Time matters little to world’s fastest jigsaw puzzle maker VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Maria Feona Imperial, VERA Files Perhaps for breaking a world record, she has already found the answer to every jigsaw puzzle ever made. But Georgina Gil-Lacuna has one more left unresolved: the puzzle of time. And she likes it … Continue reading →

  • Chinese, Taiwanese nationals with computer gadgets held VERA Files - The Inbox

    By Leilanie Adriano, VERA Files Laoag City, Ilocos Norte – At least 40 Chinese and 12 Taiwanese nationals who were found with several electronic and computer gadgets and accessories in a resort in Vigan were rounded up and detained for … Continue reading →

POLL
Loading...
Poll Choice Options