The Sunday Guardian

Chinese ships sail near disputed islands for 112 days, Japan chides

- CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI

Chinese ships have made a record number of 112 incursions into waters around the disputed Senkaku islands, which are also claimed by Japan.

Chinese vessels sailed through the contiguous zone around the islands in the East China Sea on Friday for the 112th straight day, according to the Japan Coast Guard. They have entered the contiguous zone every day since mid-february, surpassing the previous record of 111 consecutiv­e days from April to August of 2020, Nikkei Asia reported.

China also intruded into Japan’s territoria­l sea four days in April and five days in May. From January to May, China entered the waters on a total of 20 days.

This has led to a number of incidents where Chinese ships have approached Japanese fishing vessels.

On May 29, four Chinese coast guard vessels came close to three Japanese fishing boats, prompting Japan’s coast guard patrol boats to secure their safety.

The islands, which China claims and calls the Diaoyu, are about 170 km northeast of Taiwan.

Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi said these actions by Chinese ships “are unacceptab­le” at a news briefing on Friday. “We will take all possible measures for vigilant monitoring and intelligen­ce gathering,” he said.

Chinese navy warships have also been spotted around the Nansei Islands, a chain stretching southwest from Japan toward Taiwan.

Japan controls the Senkaku Islands, however, China and Taiwan continue to claim them.

Tokyo maintains the islands are an inherent part of its territory as per history and internatio­nal law.

Reassertin­g claims of sovereignt­y over Senkaku Islands, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokespers­on Wang Wenbin on Friday said that Diaoyu Island (Senkaku) and its affiliated islands are inherent Chinese territory.

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