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Japanese vessels force Taiwan protest ship to turn around

China scraps legislator's visit in Japan island row: media
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 14, 2010 - China has scrapped a senior legislator's planned Japan visit this week amid a bitter row over the arrest of a Chinese skipper near a disputed island chain last week, a news report said Tuesday. Li Jianguo, vice chairman of China's Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, has put off the planned five-day visit that was meant to start Wednesday, Kyodo News agency said, citing Japanese officials. The Chinese embassy informed the secretariat of the Japanese lower house of parliament in a phone call Monday, citing "various reasons" without elaborating, Kyodo quoted Diet secretariat officials as saying.

Japan on Monday released the 14 crew of a Chinese fishing trawler seized near disputed islands last week but kept its captain in custody, doing little to soothe Beijing's fury in a bitter row between the Asian rivals. The diplomatic spat centres on a disputed island chain in the East China Sea, where Japan says the Chinese boat was fishing illegally and, when ordered to leave, rammed two Japanese coastguard vessels during a chase. Since Tokyo arrested the skipper last Wednesday, Beijing has reacted angrily, repeatedly summoning Japan's ambassador, cancelling talks on joint energy exploration and confronting two Japanese survey ships at sea.

On Monday, China -- where the issue has sparked strong patriotic passions -- again demanded that Japan immediately release the vessel's captain, 41-year-old Zhan Qixiong, who it said was being illegally detained. Zhan is being held on suspicion of obstructing officers on duty, a charge that carries a penalty of up to three years in prison. The uninhabited islands where the incident took place -- called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China -- lie in an area believed to contain rich energy deposits, and have been a frequent focus of regional tensions.
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) Sept 14, 2010
A Taiwanese boat with anti-Japan protesters heading for a group of disputed islands in the East China Sea was forced to turn back Tuesday by Japanese patrol boats, activists and officials said.

The five people on board the fishing vessel, accompanied by Taiwan's coastguard, decided to abort the expedition around 6:00 am (2200 GMT Monday), said the organiser of the trip, the Taipei-based Zhong-Hua Baodiao Association.

"Although we were escorted by vessels from Taiwan's coastguard, they were not able to match Japan's coastguards," the association said in a statement on its website.

Taiwan's foreign ministry filed a protest to Tokyo via Japan's de facto embassy in in Taipei.

"The Diaoyutai belongs to the Republic of China and any ship from Taiwan is entitled to operate in the water area," James Chang, a Taiwanese foreign ministry spokesman, told reporters.

The East China Sea islands, known as the Diaoyutai in Taiwan, are at the centre of a diplomatic row between China and Japan, after a trawler from the Chinese mainland collided with two Japanese coastguard vessels there last week.

After a tense diplomatic standoff, Tokyo on Monday allowed the ship and the crew to return home, but is still holding the captain, despite Beijing's demands for his immediate release.

The Taiwanese ship, with two protesters and three crew, made the trip to press Taipei's claim to the islands in a mission also seen as a show of solidarity between Taiwan and China in the context of Japan's actions.

The ship and the Taiwanese coastguard fleet travelled to just 18.5 nautical miles off the disputed island chain, which is called the Senkaku islands in Japanese, the Taiwan coastguard said.

"We did not get closer to the Diaoyutai, but we used the mission to repeat our territorial claim," a Taiwanese coastguard official said.

The protest ship, which set sail from a north Taiwan fishing port Monday, was scheduled to return later in the day, the activist group said.

In Taipei, more than 100 slogan-chanting activists burnt a Japanese national flag and tore another to pieces in an angry demonstration outside Japan's de facto embassy, but no clashes were reported.

Japan recognises China rather than Taiwan, in line with a demand Beijing makes of all its diplomatic allies to cut off official ties with Taipei.

earlier related report
Kazakh oil transit through Ukraine resumes
Kiev, Ukraine (UPI) Sep 14, 2010 - Kazakhstan has agreed to resume using Ukraine as a transit nation for its oil supplies to Europe, Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych said Wednesday.

Both nations agreed to boost the transit volumes to 8 million tons per year, Russia's state-run news agency RIA Novosti reports. Yanukovych announced the agreement after a meeting with Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev Tuesday in Kiev.

"A certain portion of this amount could be transferred to Ukrainian oil refineries, which could be determined by a separate agreement," Yanukovych was quoted as saying by BSANNA News, a group of Central Asian news agencies.

Kazakhstan, a country rich in hydrocarbons, in late January halted oil transit through the Ukrainian section of the Druzhba oil pipeline following a dispute over transit prices. Kazakhstan instead sent oil through Belarus to Poland.

The row involved Kazakhstan's KazTransOil and the Ukrainian transport company Ukrtransnafta, which reportedly asked for its transit fees in euros instead of U.S. dollars, resulting in a de facto price hike of up to 25 percent, RIA Novosti writes.

While neither of the two leaders said what resulted in the shift of policies, the differences seems to have been settled.

"Oil shipments have resumed," Nazarbayev was quoted as saying by BSANNA News. "And we are talking about the increase in the transportation of oil, and in future the transportation of gas, as well as the participation of Ukrainian companies in the exploration of gas fields in Kazakhstan. This is reflected in our protocols, while ministries and agencies are conducting concrete work."

Yanukovych in April announced Ukraine's interest to buy Kazakh gas and to take part in developing oil and gas fields in Kazakhstan. Plans to build a joint liquefied natural gas station were abandoned earlier this month.

Ukraine is eager to restore the image of a reliable transit country after energy price rows with Russia temporarily halted supplies to Europe.

In the aftermath of the first gas conflict between Ukraine and Russia, two major Russian-European gas pipeline projects -- Nord Stream in Germany and South Stream in southeastern Europe -- were jump-started in a bid to bypass Ukraine and deliver Russian gas unilaterally to Europe.

Relations between Ukraine and Russia have since improved but Ukraine is also looking westward for increased energy cooperation.

After a meeting with European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso Monday in Brussels, Yanukovych vowed that gas price rows are a thing of the past. Barroso said the European Union was financing two feasibility studies for modernization of the Ukrainian gas grid.

The Soviet-era gas transit system transports 80 percent of the Russian natural gas bound for Europe but it's in dire need of reform.



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