Proposal on East China
Sea issue "rational,constructive"
China's new proposal to address the East China Sea
issue is "rational and constructive," said Qin.
According to Qin, China hopes the Japanese side will
"seriously study" the proposal, which was tabled at the conculsion of the fourth
round of consultation on the East China Sea issue two days ago in Beijing.
China's proposal "complies with the actual situation
in the East China Sea and reflects the principle of 'putting differences aside
and making joint development'," Qin said.
Should the Japanese side play up the issue in an
effort to divert attention to the Japanese leader's visit to the Yasukuni
Shrine, the move would not be conducive to Sino-Japanese relations or solution
to the East China Sea issue, Qin pointed out.
His remark referred to the repeated visits by
Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro to the Yasukuni Shrine, where 14 class
A war criminals of World War II are enshrined. The visits have outraged China
and other countries victimized by Japan during WWII and triggered strong
protests.
The Diaoyu Islands and the surrounding islets are
part of Chinese territory and China holds indisputable sovereignty over the
islands, he said.
Japan refused to accept the Chinese proposal by
assuming that "the Diaoyu Islands are Japanese territory". Such rhetoric can not
hold water, he said.
On the development of the Chunxiao oil and gas field,
Qin said that the development was carried out within the Chinese offing so that
such development is the normal activity of China to exercise its sovereign
rights. During the consultation, China has time and again stated such a stance
to the Japanese side, he said.
Japan's proposal tabled in the third round of
consultation proceeded from Japan's unilateral viewpoint, he said, adding that
China could not accept it.
Qin said the 'middle line' claimed by Japan in the
consultation was a unilateral proposal. "China has not and will never accept the
proposal," he said.
"China will not discuss the joint development with
the precondition of accepting 'the middle line'," he stressed.
During the just concluded consultation, which was
described as "pragmatic and constructive" by an anonymous Chinese diplomat, the
two sides exchanged views on joint exploitation and agreed to hold the next
round of consultation at an early date.
Hu Zhengyao, director of the Asian Department of
Chinese Foreign Ministry, and Kenichiro Sasae, head of the Asian and Oceanian
Affairs Bureau of the Japanese Foreign Ministry, participated in the
consultation as heads of the Chinese and Japanese delegations, respectively.
Since October 2004, China and Japan have held four rounds of consultations on the East China Sea issue. [1] [2] [3] [4]
|