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Anti-Japan protesters march in Chinese city: state media
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Aug 25, 2012


Hundreds of protesters took to the streets of an eastern Chinese city on Saturday to demonstrate against Japan's claims to a disputed island chain, state media reported.

The latest rally came after anti-Japan protests broke out in more than a dozen Chinese cities including Beijing and Hong Kong the previous weekend.

Demonstrators gathered on Saturday in the port city of Rizhao, in Shandong province, and marched towards the city government office with the crowd swelling to more than 400 people, the official Xinhua news agency said.

They carried banners with slogans including "Japanese get out of the Diaoyu Islands", the report said, adding that four people stood atop a sport utility vehicle and raised a Chinese flag.

The small, uninhabited islands located in the East China Sea are known in China as Diaoyu and in Japan as Senkaku. Japan controls them, though China and Taiwan also claim ownership.

The dispute has been around for decades and periodically flares up. Earlier this month, passions rose when pro-China activists from Hong Kong sailed to the islands and some landed. Japan took 14 people into custody and expelled them.

Shortly after, a group of Japanese activists sailed to the islands and also landed, sparking diplomatic protests by the Chinese and Taiwan governments and the angry street demonstrations last weekend in Chinese cities.

Saturday's demonstration came a day after lawmakers in Japan's lower house of parliament adopted a resolution condemning the visit to the islands by the pro-Beijing activists.

China's foreign ministry on Friday again issued a statement criticising Japan's stance on the row and reiterating its view that that the islands belong to China.

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Tokyo governor to visit disputed islands
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 24, 2012 - Tokyo's outspoken governor said Friday he would visit a group of islands at the centre of a bitter territorial dispute with China in a move that could inflame a heated diplomatic spat.

Shintaro Ishihara, well known for his nationalistic views, said he planned to land on the uninhabited East China Sea archipelago -- called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese -- in October.

His announcement Friday comes as nationalistic sentiments have flared both in Japan and China after pro-Beijing activists who landed on the islands this month were arrested by Japanese police and later deported.

Japanese activists and local legislators also landed on the Japanese-controlled islands, despite warnings not to do so by authorities.

Ishihara, who has been soliciting public donations to buy the islands from their private Japanese owners, added that a team of surveyors, biologists and local politicians would visit the disputed chain next week.

"We will conduct a survey again in October. I will go at that time," Ishihara told Japanese media Friday.

"If I get arrested, that's OK," he added.

In April, Ishihara announced he was in talks to buy the three islands -- Uotsurijima, Kitakojima and Minamikojima -- claiming that Japan was not doing enough to protect the territory.

The chain includes two other islands and an outcropping of rocks.

Senior government officials were reportedly already negotiating with the owners, the Kurihara family, hoping to finalise a plan to nationalise the islands by the end of the year.

The chain is currently leased to the Japanese government, which is also embroiled in a diplomatic row with South Korea over a separate group of islands.



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China, US to begin new arms race
Moscow, Russia (Voice of Russia) Aug 24, 2012
China intends to significantly increase its missile potential. According to the influential Jane's Defence Weekly, China has successfully test-fired the Dongfeng-41 (DF-41) intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capable of reaching any spot on US territory. Beijing denied the information, but admitted that it is developing a new-generation ICB capable of destroying targets all across the worl ... read more


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