The Borneo Post

China ships sail near disputed isles after Mattis visit — Japan

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TOKYO: Japan said Chinese coast guard vessels sailed yesterday into its territoria­l waters around disputed islands in the East China Sea, days after the new US defence chief vowed to defend Tokyo’s control of them.

Three ships entered the waters surroundin­g the uninhabite­d chain, the Japan Coast Guard said in a statement. The isles are controlled by Japan as the Senkakus but claimed by China as the Diaoyus.

The incursion came at around 2.00pm ( 0500 GMT) and the ships were cruising in a southsouth­westerly direction, according to the statement.

The ships left about two hours later, the coast guard said in a separate statement.

The incident came two days after James Mattis, US President Donald Trump’s new defence secretary, said in Tokyo that the island chain was subject to a longstandi­ng Washington-Tokyo defence treaty.

The islets are at the centre of a festering row between Tokyo and Beijing, which is also involved in a widening dispute with several Southeast Asian countries over islands in the South China Sea.

China was quick to accuse the United States of stirring up trouble in Asia with the comments by Mattis.

Its foreign ministry spokesman said Washington should ‘ stop making wrong remarks... and avoid making the issue more complicate­d and bringing instabilit­y’ to the region.

China and Japan have repeatedly clashed diplomatic­ally over ownership of the islands, and both sides regularly send ships to nearby waters to assert their claims.

Mattis also had strong words over the South China Sea, saying Beijing ‘ has shredded the trust’ of regional countries with the military fortificat­ion of islands it controls. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file picture shows the HTV6, an unmanned cargo spacecraft, ‘Kounotori’, or ‘stork’ in Japanese, being assembled at the Tanegashim­a Space Center in Tanegashim­a island, Kagoshima prefecture. — AFP photo
This file picture shows the HTV6, an unmanned cargo spacecraft, ‘Kounotori’, or ‘stork’ in Japanese, being assembled at the Tanegashim­a Space Center in Tanegashim­a island, Kagoshima prefecture. — AFP photo

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