Arab Times

‘Buoys near disputed islets for science’

Beijing says it should not be played up

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BEIJING, Feb 26, (AP): Chinese buoys placed near islands claimed by Beijing but controlled by Japan are intended to monitor ocean conditions and should not be “played up,” a Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n said Tuesday following questions from Tokyo.

Japan had asked China to explain the purpose of the buoys, which were placed just outside Japanese waters near uninhabite­d East China Sea islands called Senkaku by Japan and Diaoyu by China. Some in Japan had speculated that the buoys were intended to detect the movement of submarines.

Speaking at a regularly sched- uled news conference, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said they were set there by Chinese authoritie­s to carry out “maritime weather observatio­ns.”

“I think it does not deserve to be disputed or played up,” Hong said.

The longstandi­ng dispute between China and Japan over the islands flared anew after Japan purchased three of the five in the group from their private owners in September. Beijing says the islands have been Chinese for centuries, but Japan refuses to acknowledg­e countercla­ims.

Chinese ships have repeatedly crossed into Japanese waters around the islands and confronted Japanese coast guard ships with flashed messages asserting Chinese sovereignt­y and demanding they leave the area.

The sides have also accused each other of tailing their patrol planes. Japan says a Chinese ship locked on to one of its craft with its weapons control radar in a threatenin­g gesture, something China has denied.

Japan’s nationaliz­ation move sparked violent anti-Japanese protests in several Chinese cities, in a revival of propaganda-fueled animosity over Japan’s brutal invasion and occupation of much of China early in the 20th century.

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