Chinese coastguard ships today sailed into disputed waters at the centre of a bitter row with Tokyo, officials said, a day after China blasted Japanese lawmakers for visiting a controversial war shrine.
The four government vessels spent about two hours within the 12-nautical-mile band around the Tokyo-controlled Senkaku islands — which Beijing calls the Diaoyu islands — in the East China Sea.
Japan’s coastguard said the vessels had left territorial waters by 12:30 p.m. local time but remained in the area.
The incursion came after Beijing had yesterday summoned Japan’s ambassador to condemn a visit by nearly 100 Japanese lawmakers to the Yasukuni shrine on the anniversary of Tokyo’s World War II surrender.
Japanese politicians’ visits to the site are seen as a slap in the face by neighbouring nations, especially China and South Korea, which suffered from Tokyo’s imperialist expansion in the first half of the 20th century.
Today’s incident was the latest in a series of incursions by Chinese ships as relations between Tokyo and Beijing plumb all-time lows.
Last week, the Japanese foreign ministry had summoned Beijing’s envoy after Chinese ships spent more than a day in the disputed waters, marking their longest such incursion since the long-simmering dispute erupted again last year after Tokyo nationalised some of the chain.
The islands — believed to harbour vast natural resources below their seabed — are seen as a potential flashpoint that some observers fear could lead to armed conflict between the Asian giants.