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Anti-Japan protests erupt in China over island row
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Aug 19, 2012


China media slams Japan over island dispute
Beijing (AFP) Aug 20, 2012 - China's state media criticised Tokyo on Monday, a day after Japanese nationalists landed on a disputed island, warning of the damage to ties and threatening more action by Beijing.

Around a dozen nationalists raised Japanese flags on an island at the heart of a territorial row between the two countries, just days after Tokyo deported pro-Beijing protesters who had landed on the island.

The English-language China Daily newspaper said the unfurling of Japanese flags on the island was an "affront" to China's sovereignty.

"Japan is building another wall in its relations with China and the Japanese intruders and their government seem hell-bent on freezing Sino-Japanese ties," it said an editorial.

"It would be a mistake for Japan to see China's use of reason and restraint to deal with the Diaoyu Islands dispute as its weakness," the editorial said, using China's name for the island chain, which Japan calls Senkaku.

China's foreign ministry registered a "strong protest" with Japan on Sunday after the landing and urged Tokyo to put ties back on track.

The People's Daily newspaper, mouthpiece of China's ruling communist party, said Japan should recognise the consequences of its actions.

"Using the Diaoyu Islands issue to pick a quarrel and provoke an incident with China not only damages Sino-Japanese relations but also hurts the feelings of the Chinese people," it said in an editorial.

Thousands of Chinese citizens in more than 20 cities protested on Sunday, in what some analysts said was the biggest wave of anti-Japanese sentiment since 2005, when several cities also saw protests over several issues.

The People's Daily called for negotiations to resolve the issue, repeating a similar call by the Chinese government made on Friday.

But the Global Times newspaper, known for its nationalistic stance, warned China could reciprocate if Japan increased its defence of the islands.

"China will definitely take further steps regarding Diaoyu," it said. "The reluctance to resort to military means doesn't mean China is afraid of war."

Japan detained and then released 14 pro-China activists and journalists who sailed from Hong Kong to land on the islands last week.

Anti-Japan protests broke out in more than a dozen Chinese cities including Beijing and Hong Kong on Sunday as authorities allowed thousands of people to vent anger over an escalating territorial row.

The demonstrations -- which saw Japanese businesses, restaurants and cars targeted in some cities -- erupted after Japanese nationalists landed on an island claimed by both countries.

In the southern boom city of Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong, protesters waved Chinese flags and shouted slogans as they marched on major streets, with the numbers swelling to about 1,000, the official Xinhua news agency said.

Protesters overturned a Japanese-made police car and damaged a Japanese restaurant, it said.

Zhang Pei, one of the participants, said protesters were marching towards the train station on the border with Hong Kong.

"The demonstration is strung out for seven to eight kilometres (four to five miles). Many police are escorting us along the street," he told AFP by telephone.

Protests are usually swiftly put down in China, but one analyst said the government had an interest in allowing them to go ahead for a time.

"They're using the popular card to put pressure on Japan," Willy Lam, a China expert at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told AFP.

"The (Communist) party leadership realises nationalism is a double-edged sword. If they see a possibility of the protests escalating, they will give the signals to put an end to this."

In Hong Kong, about 200 demonstrators marched through the centre of the city to the Japanese consulate chanting anti-Japan slogans, broadcaster RTHK said.

Meanwhile more than 100 people gathered near a complex housing the Japanese consulate in the southern city of Guangzhou, chanting "Japan get out of the Diaoyu Islands," Xinhua said.

China -- which on Sunday lodged a "strong protest" with Tokyo -- calls the disputed archipelago Diaoyu, but it is controlled by Japan, which calls it Senkaku.

Witnesses said demonstrations also took place in Shanghai and the southwestern city of Chengdu, where protests shut down a Japanese department store and a branch of the Japanese clothing store Uniqlo.

Anti-Japan protests also occurred in Qingdao, on the east coast, as well as in the northeastern cities of Shenyang and Harbin. Xinhua named several other cities where demonstrations took place, including the capital Beijing.

A demonstrator in Hangzhou, which is close to Shanghai, put the number of protesters there at about 1,000. They marched and chanted slogans before dispersing.

The protests followed the detention of 14 pro-China activists and journalists who had sailed from Hong Kong to land on the islands. They were deported on Friday.

Some Chinese Internet users called on Beijing to take a harder line.

"I've been thinking all the time, where is our mother country at this moment? Where is our army? When can China be tough instead of letting patriots sacrifice?" said a microblog posting by "Mihudemi".

Another, "Li You", said: "What is our government going to do about the Japanese landing on the Diaoyu Islands?" in a posting through the Sina microblog, China's equivalent to Twitter.

The latest anti-Japan protests had echoes of 2005, when several Chinese cities saw demonstrations over a range of grievances including Japan's wartime atrocities.

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