A group of Japanese activists swam ashore and raised flags early
Sunday on one of a group of islands at the centre of an escalating
territorial dispute with China.
The Coast Guard in southern
Japan's Okinawa prefecture said nine or 10 activists had made an
unauthorized landing on Uotsuri Island, part of the small archipelago
known in Japan as Senkaku and in China as Diaoyu. The uninhabited
islands surrounded by rich fishing grounds are controlled by Japan but
also claimed by China and Taiwan.
Plans for Sunday's visit drew a protest from China's Foreign Ministry.
"Any unilateral action taken by Japan on the islands is illegal and
invalid," it said in a statement issued on its website on Saturday.
Days
earlier, a group of 14 Hong Kong residents and mainland Chinese had
traveled by boat to the islands and some swam ashore. Japan arrested
them on Wednesday for landing without authorisation, and sought to quiet
the regional spat by quickly deporting the group Friday. Plans for
further visits by activists on both sides appear likely to further
inflame the territorial tensions.
The Coast Guard did not
identify by name those who landed on Uotsuri Island on Sunday. They were
members of a group of ultra-conservative parliamentarians and local
politicians who were visiting waters off the disputed islands over the
weekend to mourn for the victims of a boat accident near there at the
end of World War II.
"Four days ago there was an illegal landing
of Chinese people on the island - as such we need to solidly reaffirm
our own territory," said Koichi Mukoyama, a lawmaker who was among seven
conservative parliamentarians aboard a boat in the flotilla of some 20
vessels that traveled to the islands.
Photos from Japan's Kyodo
News Agency showed several men and a woman, in street clothes still wet
from swimming ashore, brandishing the Japanese flag atop rocks on the
shore of the uninhabited island.
Last week's visit by the Chinese
activists raised calls by critics of Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's
government to take stronger action to protect the islands.
Protesters in Beijing, Hong Kong and other cities praised the activists as heroes and burned Japanese flags.
Japan
says it has controlled the five main islands for more than 100 years.
It has been trying to place four that are privately held under state
ownership to bolster its territorial claim.
Source: NDTV
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