JAPAN TO RENAME
ISLANDS DISPUTED WITH CHINA
A local council
in southern Japan voted to rename an area, including islands disputed with
China and Taiwan
The local
assembly of Ishigaki city approved a plan to change the name of the area
covering the Tokyo controlled Senkaku Islands — known by Taiwan and China as
the Diaoyus — from “Tonoshiro” to “Tonoshiro Senkaku”
Uninhabited islands are
at the centre of a festering row between Tokyo and Beijing and the move sparked
anger in both Taiwan and mainland China
Senkaku/ Diaoyu/ Diaoyutai Islands: Group of
uninhabited islands in the East China Sea
Located east of Mainland China,
northeast of Taiwan,
west of Okinawa Island, and north of the southwestern
end of the Ryukyu Islands
Disputed islands between the People's Republic of
China, the Republic of China (Taiwan), and Japan
China claims the discovery and ownership of the
islands from the 14th century
Historically, the Chinese had used the uninhabited
islands as navigational markers in making the voyage to the Ryukyu Kingdom
Japanese central government annexed the islands in
early 1895 while still fighting China in the First Sino-Japanese War
Islands came under US government occupation in 1945
In 1971, the Okinawa Reversion Treaty passed the
U.S. Senate, returning the islands to Japanese control in 1972
Also in 1972, the Republic of China (Taiwan)
government and People's Republic of China government officially began to
declare ownership of the islands
On December 17, 2010, Ishigaki declared January 14
as "Pioneering Day" to commemorate Japan's 1895 annexation of the
Senkaku Islands
China assert that the Potsdam Declaration required that Japan
relinquish control of all islands except for "the islands of Honshū,
Hokkaidō, Kyūshū, Shikoku and such minor islands as we determine", and
China state that this means control of the islands should pass to Taiwan, which
was part of China at the time of the first Sino-Japanese War as well as of the San
Francisco Peace Treaty
Japan does not accept that there is a dispute,
asserting that the islands are an integral part of Japan. Japan assert that the
islands had been uninhabited and showed no trace of having been under the
control of China prior to 1895, the islands were neither part of Taiwan nor
part of the Pescadores Islands, which were ceded to Japan by the Qing Dynasty
of China in Article II of the May 1895 Treaty of Shimonoseki, thus were not later renounced by Japan under
Article II of the San Francisco Peace Treaty, though the
islands were controlled by the United States as an occupying power between 1945
and 1972, Japan has since 1972 exercised administration over the islands.
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