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Japan-China Island Dispute:Japan’s new Prime Minister Shinzo Abe does not want war with China / Asia News

Tensions are mounting in the Far East after Japan’s new leader Shinzo Abe fired a shot across China’s bows over an ongoing territory dispute.

Speaking at his first news conference, Mr Abe reiterated Tokyo’s claim of sovereignty over a group of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea which is contested by Beijing.

“China is challenging the fact that [the islands] are Japan’s inherent territory,” Mr Abe said.

“Our objective is to stop the challenge. We don’t intend to worsen relations between Japan and China,” he said.

The election result represents a dramatic lurch to the right for Japan.

The Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) led by Yoshihiko Noda suffered a significant defeat, winning just 57 seats – down from 230 in the last election.

Mr Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) won 294 seats, up from 118.

When combined with the New Komeito Party, its junior coalition partner, the LDP now has a two-thirds majority in the 480-seat lower house, enough to override the upper house in which no party has overall control.

Mr Abe, 58 – who has already served as Prime Minister for a year between 2006 and 2007 – is seen as having a hawkish foreign policy and a radical economic agenda.

He characterised the win as more of a protest vote against the DPJ than a strong endorsement of his party.

“I think the results do not mean we have regained the public’s trust 100%. Rather, they reflect ‘no votes’ to the DPJ’s politics that stalled everything the past three years,” he said.

“Now we are facing the test of how we can live up to the public’s expectations, and we have to answer that question.”

The win by his LDP Party is widely expected to produce a government with a hardline stance on the ongoing territorial dispute with China.

Mr Abe has said he wants Japan to play a bigger role in global security. He has pledged to change the country’s pacifist constitution signed after World War Two.

This file aerial shot taken on September 15, 2010 shows the disputed islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China in the East China Sea.  The Japanese government will buy three islands at the centre of a bitter territorial row with China, a spokesman said on September 26, 2012 after a cabinet meeting.
This file aerial shot taken on September 15, 2010 shows the disputed islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China in the East China Sea. The Japanese government will buy three islands at the centre of a bitter territorial row with China, a spokesman said on September 26, 2012 after a cabinet meeting.

A new right-leaning government combined with changes to the constitution and growing nationalist movement within Japan could significantly increase tensions in East Asia.

“We must strengthen our alliance with the US and also improve relations with China, with a strong determination that is no change in the fact the Senkaku islands are our territory,” Mr Abe said after the victory.

China and Japan, who have a historically hostile relationship, both claim the group of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea. Beijing calls them the Diaoyu Islands and Tokyo refers to them as the Senkaku Islands.

China’s claim had been dormant until the Japanese Government bought the islands from an individual who owned them earlier this year.

Last week, Japan scrambled fighter jets to the skies above the islands after a Chinese surveillance plane was spotted in air-space deemed by Tokyo to be Japanese.

Fixing Japan’s economy will be the biggest domestic challenge for the incoming government. Mr Abe’s policy is for ‘unlimited’ monetary easing and big spending on public projects.

Japan could be about to enter its fourth recession since 2000 and has a public debt twice the size of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Some of Japan’s most famous companies like Sony and Sharp are struggling in the face of competition from rivals in China and South Korea.

Their woes are compounded by a strong yen, which has forced the price of their products in foreign markets up considerably.

Mr Abe’s party also has a pro-nuclear energy policy despite last year’s disaster at the Fukushima nuclear power station.

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