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A Chinese coastguard ship sails near a Japanese coastguard vessel off Uotsuri Island, one of the disputed Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea on April 27. Photo: Kyodo/via Reuters

Chinese ships spotted near disputed East China Sea islets every day this year, Japan says

  • Tokyo’s top government spokesman on Monday described the series of ‘intrusions into territorial waters’ as ‘an extremely serious matter’
  • The territorial dispute over the Tokyo-controlled Diayou Islands, known in Japan as the Senkakus, is a long-running sore point between the countries
Japan
Japan has spotted Chinese ships sailing near disputed islands in the East China Sea for a record 158 consecutive days, Tokyo’s top government spokesman said on Monday.
The territorial dispute over the Tokyo-controlled Diayou Islands, known in Japan as the Senkakus, is a long-running sore point between the countries.

Relations deteriorated in 2012 when Tokyo “nationalised” some of these remote islands, and Japanese officials regularly protest against the presence of Chinese coastguard and other vessels in the surrounding waters.

On Monday, Japan’s coastguard observed four China Maritime Police Bureau vessels sailing in the “contiguous” zone adjacent to Japan’s territorial sea near the island chain.

Contiguous waters are a 12-nautical-mile band that extends beyond territorial waters.

The Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands. On Monday, Japan’s coastguard said it had observed four China Maritime Police Bureau vessels sailing near the disputed islets. Photo: Kyodo via Reuters

It was the 158th consecutive day that Chinese vessels were spotted there – surpassing the previous record of 157 days in 2021, top government spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi said. That means Japan has spotted Chinese ships near the islets every day since December 21 last year.

“The government considers this series of navigations within the contiguous zone and intrusions into territorial waters an extremely serious matter,” he told reporters.

Hayashi said Prime Minister Fumio Kishida had expressed concern over the issue at a bilateral meeting with Chinese Premier Li Qiang in Seoul on Sunday.
Kishida is in the South Korean capital for the first trilateral summit with Li and President Yoon Suk-yeol in nearly five years. It was held on Monday morning.
In April, Beijing lodged a protest with Tokyo after a group of Japanese lawmakers visited the disputed isles, a trip the Chinese embassy denounced as “provocative”.

After years of negotiations, the two countries have set up a military hotline to avert unexpected clashes in the East China Sea, with the first call held a year ago.

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