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China media labels Japan foreign minister an 'extremist'

Video shows China ship to blame for collisions: lawmakers
Tokyo (AFP) Nov 1, 2010 - Japanese lawmakers on Monday said a coast guard video shows a Chinese trawler intentionally ramming Japanese vessels in an incident that sparked the worst row in years between the Asian giants. The Japan coast guard showed 30 lawmakers video footage of the September 7 collisions between the Chinese boat and Japanese patrol vessels near a disputed island chain called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. "It showed the moments of collisions very clearly. It was the Chinese ship that bumped into (Japanese vessels)," said Hiroshi Nakai, chairman of the lower House of Representatives Budget Committee.

The footage confirmed the Japanese government's stand that the Chinese ship rammed into the Japanese ships intentionally, the ruling-party lawmaker said after seeing the edited video, whose total duration is less than seven minutes. It threatens to further inflame a row that has escalated into protests, scrapped bilateral meetings between the two sides and accusations that China is blocking exports of vital minerals. Japan's coastguard in the early hours of September 8 arrested the Chinese captain of a fishing boat which had collided with two Japanese coastguard vessels in a high-speed pursuit. The skipper was held on suspicion he had rammed the patrol boats on purpose but Japan released him weeks later, following a barrage of protests and reprimands from China which called the arrest invalid and illegal.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 1, 2010
China's state media on Monday accused Japan's foreign minister of ruining a planned formal meeting between their two premiers as they try to end a damaging row, branding him an "extremist".

Japan's Seiji Maehara and Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi met on the sidelines of a regional summit in Vietnam on Friday, boosting hopes that Asia's big powers would begin to heal the wounds from their two-month rift.

But China angrily accused Tokyo of making false statements over the disputed East China Sea islands at the centre of the row, and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan only held brief informal talks.

"The one to blame is Japan's newly-appointed foreign minister, Seiji Maehara," the state-run Global Times -- a sister publication of the Communist Party mouthpiece the People's Daily -- said in a commentary.

"Kan has chosen the wrong guy to represent Japan in international relations. The young and promising new-generation politician proved to be more like a political extremist than a diplomat."

Maehara took up his post shortly after the row first erupted in early September, when Tokyo arrested the Chinese captain of a fishing boat that had collided with two Japanese coastguard vessels in the disputed area.

Both sides claim the potentially resource-rich islets, which are known as the Diaoyus in China and Senkakus in Japan, as their own. The islands are administered by Tokyo.

Maehara piqued Beijing's ire when he said the country's reactions during the course of the dispute had been "hysterical".

The Global Times said his statements "were the most offensive by a Japanese government official in the past decade or two".

"Maehara's right-wing comments have reduced Japan's diplomatic flexibility to zero," it said.

It warned the Japanese diplomat that he should not push his country to counter China's "inevitable" rise, saying the consequences of such a move would be "unbearable for Japan".

Kan has sought to play down the diplomatic drama, saying that the current problems between Asia's top two economies were not "so critical" compared to the turbulence that has marked their long history.

The two leaders agreed in Hanoi to speak at more length in the future and to "continue making efforts on promoting a strategic, mutually beneficial relationship", according to a Japanese official.



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