The Manila Times

Japan to deport pro-china island activists

- BY HARUMI OZAWA

TOKYO: Japan was readying to deport 14 people it arrested after proChina activists landed on a disputed island, reports said Thursday, in what was being seen as an attempt to defuse a growing row.

The day after historical wounds were torn open on the anniversar­y of Japan’s World War II surrender with calls from Seoul and Beijing for atonement, Tokyo scrambled to find a solution to another potentiall­y explosive situation.

Five men, who became the first non-Japanese to set foot on the East China Sea island for eight years, and a further nine arrested aboard the boat that had carried them from Hong Kong, would be sent home as early as Friday, Kyodo news and other media reported.

The 14 had all been arrested for violating Japanese immigratio­n law. Kyodo, citing unnamed government sources said they would be handed over to immigratio­n officials “possibly Friday”.

“They all deny the allegation of illegal entry, saying the islands are part of Chinese territory,” a local police spokesman told AFP earlier.

Jiji Press said cabinet ministers would meet Friday morning to discuss the illegal landing.

Dozens of people protested at the Japanese consulate in Hong Kong on Thursday, demanding Japan release the activists and give up its claim to the island chain.

Members of the pro- Beijing Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions waved Chinese flags and chanted slogans such as “Down with Japanese militarism” and “Get out of our Diaoyu Islands”, the Chinese name for what Japan calls Senkaku.

Protest group leader Aron Kwok told AFP the arrests had been unlawful and the 14 should be freed immediatel­y.

A handful of protesters shouted anti-Japanese slogans outside the embassy in Beijing before being led away by police, an AFP reporter witnessed.

A lone protester shouted slogans and threw a glass bottle and a traffic barrier towards the embassy gate, before he too was escorted away.

In Shanghai, around 20 people waved Chinese flags, hoisted banners that read “return my Diaoyu Islands, release my brave warriors,” and shouted slogans outside the Japanese consulate before being escorted away by police.

An editorial in the People’s Daily, the Chinese Communist Party’s mouthpiece, upbraided Japan and called on Tokyo to reflect on its actions “from a deep level”.

“A country... that persists in... political wrongdoing­s and that cannot stand face-to-face with the internatio­nal community cannot become a respected country no matter how much its economy grows,” it said.

The case is a delicate one for Japan, which has to balance popular irritation at the landing with vehement demands from China for the immediate release of the group.

The decision to deport the 14 was widely expected, with Tokyo looking to avoid a repeat of the diplomatic calamity of 2010 when it held a Chinese trawlerman for two weeks after he rammed coastguard vessels.

Japan was widely criticized as having caved in to Chinese pressure

and being forced into releasing the man after Beijing halted high level contacts and stymied trade.

The group of activists had sailed from Hong Kong on Sunday to the archipelag­o, where pictures show they raised Chinese and Taiwanese flags. Taiwan also claims the islands.

In 2004, when a group of Chinese activists landed on a disputed island, then prime minister Junichiro Koizumi ordered their deportatio­n after two days.

The renewed dispute over the islands comes as Japan’s relations with South Korea have become increasing­ly frayed after President Lee Myung-Bak last week visited islets controlled by Seoul but claimed by Tokyo.

Nearly 200 people held a rally in front of the South Korean embassy in central Tokyo, protesting against the visit and calling on Lee to apologize to the Japanese emperor.

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