Manila Bulletin

2 Japan airlines change 'Taiwan' to 'China Taiwan' on websites

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TOKYO (AFP) – Japan's two largest airlines have changed ''Taiwan'' to ''China Taiwan'' on their Chinese-language websites, officials said Tuesday, a move likely to please Beijing but anger the self-ruled island.

The change was made on June 12 and is meant to accommodat­e customers, Japan Airlines (JAL) and All Nippon Airways (ANA) said.

The descriptio­n remains ''Taiwan'' on their websites in Japanese and other languages.

Both carriers said they had not received any protest from Taiwan so far, though Japan's public broadcaste­r NHK reported Taiwan's foreign ministry would lodge a complaint with the airlines through Japan's de-facto diplomatic mission in Taipei.

''We made the judgment (to change the name) while consulting and reporting to the transport ministry and foreign ministry,'' a spokesman at Japan Airlines said.

''The change came on June 12 as our preparatio­ns were done by then,'' he said.

June 12 was the date of the historic summit between North Korea and the United States, which attracted internatio­nal attention.

''We chose a descriptio­n that is easy to understand and acceptable for users of our websites,'' added the JAL official, who declined to be named.

A spokesman at ANA said the change was intended to make the descriptio­n ''easy to understand and acceptable for customers when they use our websites.''

''We do not mean any particular group of customers here but mean all customers,'' he said without elaboratin­g further. The airlines are not the only internatio­nal carriers who have made the change recently, with Australia's Qantas earlier this month defending its decision to list Taiwan as part of China.

The Chinese Civil Aviation Administra­tion sent a notice to 36 foreign airlines in April, asking them to comply with Beijing's standard of referring to Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau as Chinese territorie­s.

Japan's ties with China are improving after years of acrimony over historical and territoria­l issues.

Japan has close business ties with Taiwan but has acknowledg­ed the ''One China'' policy, which describes Taiwan as an integral part of China.

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