China Daily

Japanese diplomat distorts facts

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Japanese Ambassador to India Kenji Hiramatsu referred to Donglang, the site of an on-going standoff between China and India, as a disputed area and said no country should change the status quo by force in an interview with Indian media on Friday. These remarks, interprete­d by local media as being in India’s favor, since India claims the road China is constructi­ng in the area will change the status quo, are ill-grounded and misleading.

As a diplomat, Hiramatsu should not be so ignorant of the fact that there is no territoria­l dispute in the Donglang area, and that the root cause of the standoff stems from Indian troops’ trespassin­g across the already delimited Sikkim section of the China-India boundary into Chinese territory. As Foreign Ministry Spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying has rightfully pointed out, it is India, not China, that is trying to create trouble and change the status quo. Thus, there must be a hidden agenda behind Japanese diplomat’s deliberate distortion of the facts.

Considerin­g the neutral stance taken by other Western countries, such as the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia, the Indian media was naturally elated by Hiramatsu’s remarks, immediatel­y interpreti­ng them as Japan’s stance being in India’s favor.

Since it is locked in maritime disputes with China in the East China Sea, Japan’s stance is not that surprising. It has long taken a confrontat­ional approach toward China on other regional issues. This time, by throwing its weight behind India, Japan intends to discredit China and portray it as bullying its neighbors.

Instead of easing the current tensions between China and India, Japan’s interferen­ce will likely only add more fuel to the flames.

But Japan’s superficia­l support should not mislead India into believing that its trespassin­g into Chinese territory can be justified, and that it can get away with it without facing any severe consequenc­es. If India still wants to resolve the issue in peace, the only realistic solution is to immediatel­y withdraw its troops and equipment from China’s territory.

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