Tag Archives: Chinese Foreign Ministry

China angered by Japan's increased jet scrambles

China has accused Japan of raising regional tensions with its increased use of fighter jets to monitor Chinese aircraft that approach a cluster of islands claimed by both countries.

Japan said Wednesday that it dispatched fighter jets in response to Chinese planes 306 times during the 12 months through March 2013, up from 156 the previous year.

Chinese aircraft have steadily increased patrols in the East China Sea, where the Japanese-controlled islands are located. There has been only one report of a Chinese plane violating Japanese airspace over the uninhabited islands, called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.

On Thursday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Japan‘s use of fighter jets only increased tension. He added that Beijing hoped the sides could negotiate a settlement to the dispute.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/eiaO_YysayA/

China says its flares didn't hit Vietnamese boats

China said its navy fired flares at Vietnamese fishing boats but denied Hanoi’s claim that a vessel was damaged in an incident that is highlighting tensions over disputed South China Sea islands and surrounding waters believed to hold a wealth of oil and natural gas deposits.

Sailors on board a Chinese navy craft fired two flares at four Vietnamese boats that had earlier failed to respond to whistles, shouts and signal flags demanding that they cease fishing and leave the area, which China claims as its territorial waters, the Defense Ministry said in a statement issued late Tuesday.

It said the ships were fishing illegally in Chinese waters off the Paracel Islands on March 20 and both flares burned out in the air. Chinese forces did not fire weapons and no Vietnamese boats caught fire.

Vietnam, which also claims the Paracels, said one of the boat’s cabin’s caught fire in the incident, which it called “very serious.” The government lodged a formal complaint with the Chinese Embassy in Hanoi, seeking compensation for the alleged damage and punishment of the Chinese sailors responsible.

The fishing boat was near the Paracels when an unidentified Chinese vessel chased it and fired the flare, the Vietnamese government said in a statement issued late Monday.

The claim that a Chinese ship started a fire was a “sheer fabrication,” the Chinese statement said, citing an unidentified navy spokesman.

China‘s Defense Ministry said the boats were in Chinese territorial waters and China was acting within its rights by driving them off.

“It is completely legitimate for Chinese vessels to expel boats that illegally enter China‘s territorial waters to safeguard the country’s territorial sovereignty and marine interests,” the statement said.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Tuesday that China had taken unspecified but “legitimate and reasonable” actions against Vietnamese boats working illegally in Chinese waters. He denied that any boats had been damaged, but gave few other details.

There have been other clashes in the waters, often related to claims of illegal fishing or violations of fishing moratoriums unilaterally imposed by the Chinese.

Vietnam and China each claim large parts of the South China Sea. The Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei also maintain that parts of the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

North Korea Threats: China Calls For Restraint After Pyongyang Orders Units Ready To Target U.S. Bases

By The Huffington Post News Editors

BEIJING, March 26 (Reuters) – China said on Tuesday it hopes all sides on the Korean peninsula can exercise restraint, after North Korea ordered its strategic rocket and long-range artillery units to be combat ready to target U.S. military bases on Guam , Hawaii and mainland America.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei made the comments to reporters at a daily briefing. (Reporting by Ben Blanchard, Writing by Sui-Lee Wee; editing by Jonathan Standing)

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More on North Korea

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Pakistan agrees to transfer key port to China

Pakistan has agreed let China take operational control of a strategic deep water port on the country’s southwestern coast.

The port is vital to Beijing‘s economic and perhaps military interests.

A spokesman for Pakistan‘s Ministry of Ports and Shipping, Mohammed Raza, says the Cabinet agreed Wednesday to the deal involving Gwadar port in Baluchistan province.

Under the deal, a company owned by the Chinese government, China Overseas Port Holdings Limited, would purchase control of the port from Singapore’s PSA International Pte Ltd.

Raza said Friday that the transaction has not yet taken place.

Asked about the port Thursday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Beijing will support projects that are conducive to good relations with Pakistan.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Japanese envoy in Beijing to talk about islands

China welcomed a Japanese envoy Tuesday for talks as both sides took steps to cool tensions over an island dispute that has raised fears of an armed confrontation.

In a sign of the importance Beijing attached to the visit, state media gave prominent coverage to the arrival of Natsuo Yamaguchi, leader of a junior party in the ruling coalition of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Yamaguchi, whose schedule has not been announced, is not a member of the government so his meetings in Beijing represent a type of quiet diplomacy that could allow for a franker exchange of views than official talks might.

Yamaguchi’s visit is part of China‘s “normal relations and contact with friendly Japanese political parties and organizations,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters at a regularly scheduled briefing. “The dealings can help solve problems and move forward healthy relations,” Hong said.

Yamaguchi made no comments upon his arrival but told reporters in Tokyo he hoped his four-day trip would help ease months of friction over the uninhabited East China Sea islands that are controlled by Japan but claimed by China.

“It is important for us to have consultations to normalize our relationship,” Yamaguchi said.

However, he said Tokyo‘s assertion that the islands are Japanese territory is unchanged, rejecting Chinese demands that Japan acknowledge a dispute over their sovereignty. Both nations have called for dialogue recently, and Chinese state broadcaster CCTV led its noon news broadcast with a live report on Yamaguchi’s arrival.

Chinese media reported that Yamaguchi would deliver a letter from Abe addressed to Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

Tensions soared after Japan‘s government bought the uninhabited islands, known in Chinese as Diaoyu and Japanese as Senkaku, from their private Japanese owners in September. Trade and tourism between the countries have dropped off sharply and almost all bilateral meetings between their officials have been canceled.

The islands are surrounded by rich fishing grounds and have a potential wealth of gas, oil and other undersea resources. For China, they also mark a strategic gateway to the Pacific Ocean and represent the deeply emotional legacy of Japan‘s conquest of Chinese territory beginning in 1895, as well as its brutal World War II occupation of much of the country.

Placed under U.S. control after World War II, the islands were returned to Japan in 1972, although Beijing says they have been Chinese territory for centuries. Taiwan also claims the islands.

Japan‘s nationalization of the islands sparked violent anti-Japanese rioting in China and prompted Beijing to dispatch marine surveillance ships to them on a regular basis to confront Japanese coast guard cutters assigned to protect the area.

That standoff has also moved to the skies. Earlier this month, both sides scrambled fighter jets to trail each other’s planes — underscoring the potential for accidents or miscalculations sparking a clash that could draw in Japan‘s treaty partner the United States.

Beijing has since ratcheted down its verbal attacks on Japan and last week hosted a visit by China-friendly former Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama for informal talks on the dispute.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News