The Manila Times

Hundreds rally at Japan embassy in China

-

BEIJING: Angry demonstrat­ors threw stones and plastic water bottles at the Japanese embassy in Beijing on Saturday amid rising tensions between the two powers over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

The army was drafted in to help contain the protest, which threatened to spill over into violence at mid- day, as police armed with shields and batons struggled to contain the angry demonstrat­ion.

There was no official estimate of the number of demonstrat­ors, but Agence France-Presse correspond­ents at the scene estimated the crowd size at more than 2,000 people.

Roads were cordoned off and a helicopter hovered overhead, monitoring the protest.

The protest, along with a series of other demonstrat­ions across China, came after Japan this week announced it had bought the islands, which it administer­s and calls Senkaku, but which China claims and calls Diaoyu.

Six Chinese ships sailed into wa- ters around the archipelag­o on Friday, with Beijing saying they were there for law enforcemen­t, leading Tokyo to summon the Chinese ambassador to protest what it insisted was a territoria­l incursion.

Japanese restaurant­s in the area around the Japanese embassy, which were all closed, appeared to have not been targeted by the angry crowds, but some protesters had draped Chinese flags over them.

Demonstrat­ors have staged protests in front of the embassy for most of the week. On Thursday, hundreds sang the Chinese national anthem and waved flags to condemn Tokyo’s purchase of the disputed island chain.

Meanwhile, other demonstrat­ions were being staged across Chi- na on Saturday with reports of Japanese- built cars and Japanese restaurant­s being attacked by angry crowds.

In China’s commercial hub of Shanghai, police threw a security ring around the Japanese consulate but allowed groups of protestors to approach the compound for short periods.

Scores of protestors waved Chinese flags, chanted slogans like “Little Japanese” and held up signs insisting the islands were Chinese.

On China’s Sina Weibo, a microblog similar to Twitter, images were posted of protests in the southweste­rn cities of Chongqing and Kunming.

Protests were reported in several other places including the eastern city of Nanjing and Xian and Taiyuan in the north.

China and Japan are Asia’s two biggest economies with close trade and business ties. The political relationsh­ip, however, is often tense due to the territoria­l dispute and Chinese resentment over historical issues.

A Japanese diplomat told Agence France- Presse on Friday that Tokyo had issued a safety warning to its citizens in China after six “serious” cases of assault and harassment.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Security officers reinforce barriers as people hold Chinese flags and banners during an anti-Japanese protest outside the Japanese embassy over the Diaoyu islands which are known as the Senkaku islands in Japanese.
AFP PHOTO Security officers reinforce barriers as people hold Chinese flags and banners during an anti-Japanese protest outside the Japanese embassy over the Diaoyu islands which are known as the Senkaku islands in Japanese.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines