(cache) Japan owns Senkaku isles: Taiwan's Lee | The Japan Times Online
The Japan Times Online Sign inRegister
Home > News 求人ならリクナビNEXT
print button email button Bookmark and Share Answer Tips

Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2002

Japan owns Senkaku isles: Taiwan's Lee

NAHA, Okinawa Pref. (Kyodo) Former Taiwan President Lee Teng-hui has said the Senkaku Islands, which are Japanese-controlled but claimed by Taiwan and China, actually belong to Japan.

"The land of the Senkaku Islands belongs to Okinawa, therefore it is a territory of Japan," Lee said, according to an interview carried in the Okinawa Times on Tuesday. "There is no evidence for China's territorial claim, no matter what it says." It is not clear which international law China's claim is based on."

The island group, in the East China Sea, is known in Japan as the Senkaku Islands, Tiaoyutai in Taiwan and Diaoyu in China.

Lee told the daily that China has no right to the islands unless the claim is based on an appropriate international law or it has occupied the land with military forces.

Diplomatic experts said the comment will likely cause repercussions in China and Taiwan because China sees the islands as belonging to Taiwan, and thus also to China. Taiwan believes the islands are inherent to Taiwan.

The vernacular paper ran the interview, conducted in Taipei on Sept. 16, as part of a series of special interviews for the 30th anniversary of the prefecture's 1972 reversion to Japanese control after 27 years of U.S. military rule.

We welcome your opinions. Click to send a message to the editor.

The Japan Times

Article 9 of 17 in National news

Previous Next



A piece of your mind
Learning a language
In a recent interview, Peter Barakan said that fluency in Japanese requires daily exposure and hard work. What do you think is the best tip for mastering a foreign language?
Make friends who don't speak your language.
Enroll in language classes; you need a group and a well-planned course .
Date or marry a native speaker.
Focus on a passion, like manga or movies, and the rest will follow.
Disciplined self-study.
Ditch the motherland and go completely native.
Who needs fluency? The basics will suffice.
Total Votes : 1262
View past polls
 

Back to Top

About us |  Work for us |  Contact us |  Privacy policy |  Link policy |  Registration FAQ
Advertise in japantimes.co.jp.
This site has been optimized for modern browsers. Please make sure that Javascript is enabled in your browser's preferences.
The Japan Times Ltd. All rights reserved.