You Are Here: Home » News In Image » Japan PM vows to defend islands from China

Japan PM vows to defend islands from China

TOKYO (AP) – Japan’s prime minister vowed Saturday to defend disputed remote islands from threats by China after a series of confrontations that have raised the risk of an armed clash.

“The security environment surrounding our country is increasingly becoming more severe as we face provocation to our territorial rights,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said. “I will take the lead to stand up against the present danger and protect the people’s lives and asset, as well as our land, the seas and the air at all costs.”

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe delivers a speech in front of the members of Japan Air Self-Defence Force in its Naha base, Okinawa, southern Japan, Saturday, Feb 2. AP

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe delivers a speech in front of the members of Japan Air Self-Defence Force in its Naha base, Okinawa, southern Japan, Saturday, Feb 2. AP

His comments, made in a speech to Japan’s Self-Defence Forces in the country’s south, apparently referred to China’s growing presence near the disputed islands, called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.

The uninhabited islands are controlled by Japan but also claimed by China. Japan’s nationalisation of the islands in September triggered violent protests across China, hurting Japanese companies there and the economy.

China has sent surveillance ships regularly to waters near the islands, and aircraft from the two sides have trailed each other, raising the risk of missteps that could trigger a clash.

Japan has recently launched diplomatic efforts to ease tensions, with China-friendly officials visiting Beijing for talks.

Abe’s government last week endorsed a budget bill for this year that included 4.75 trillion yen ($51 billion) in proposed defense spending partly aimed at beefing up Japan’s coastal and marine surveillance around islands also claimed by China and Taiwan. The government also plans to beef up Coast Guard deployment in the area.

Later Saturday, Abe was to visit the regional Coast Guard office on the southern island of Okinawa, which is in charge of patrolling in the waters around the disputed islands, to meet the officers.

Also Saturday, Coast Guard officials said they arrested the Chinese captain of a 100-tonne boat earlier Saturday off the northeastern coast of Miyako island, about 200 kilometres southwest of the disputed islands, for suspected illegal fishing inside Japanese exclusive economic waters.

© 2013 Borneo Bulletin Online - The Independent Newspaper in Brunei Darussalam, Sabah and Sarawak

Scroll to top