Sea crash sparks Japan-China diplomatic spat

In this photo released by Japan Coast Guard, a Chinese fishing boat is inspected by Japan Coast Guard officials after it collided with two Japanese patrol vessels near a chain of disputed islands known as Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese in the East China Sea, yesterday. Picture: AP

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

A TENSE maritime incident yesterday in which two Japanese patrol vessels and a Chinese fishing boat collided near a disputed island chain triggered a diplomatic spat between the Asian giants.

China expressed its "great concern" over the series of two collisions in the East China Sea, while Japan summoned a Chinese diplomat to protest the incident, in which no-one was reported injured and neither vessel sank. The uninhabited islands — known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China — lie between Japan's Okinawa island and Taiwan. They are claimed by Tokyo, Beijing and Taipei and are frequently the focus of regional tensions.

Japan's Ichiro Ozawa, who is vying to oust Prime Minister Naoto Kan in a party leadership race this month to lead the nation, said Sunday that Tokyo must strongly fend off Beijing's claim to the disputed islets.

The incident Tuesday morning started when Japan's 1,349-ton patrol boat the Yonakuni ordered the Chinese trawler to cease fishing in the disputed waters, Kyodo News agency reported, citing the Japanese Coast Guard.

The Chinese boat's bow then hit the Yonakuni's stern and also collided with another Japanese patrol boat, the Mizuki, some 40 minutes later, Kyodo reported citing the coastguard. Three Japanese patrol boats then chased the Chinese vessel, and 22 Japanese personnel boarded the ship to question the Chinese crew on suspicion of violating the fisheries law, Kyodo reported.

Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu later told a regular news briefing that "China expresses great concern over this incident".AFP