China Expels Japanese Vessel from Disputed East China Sea Waters

Beijing: China announced on Tuesday that its Coast Guard expelled a Japanese vessel after it allegedly entered the waters of disputed islands in the East China Sea, describing the incident as an illegal intrusion requiring action.

According to Kuwait News Agency, a coast guard spokesman reported that officers applied control measures under Chinese law to warn the Japanese trawler Ryoumaru and push it out of waters around the Diaoyu Islands, which China claims as its own.

Beijing urged Tokyo to halt actions it described as violations and provocations, asserting that the islands are Chinese territory. China vowed to continue patrols and law-enforcement operations to defend its sovereignty and maritime interests in the nearby waters.

The announcement came amid worsening diplomatic tensions after Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi stated last month that any use of force against Taiwan could justify a military response, a comment China condemned as overstepping the line.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said Japan's leader tied her nation's security to Taiwan and hinted at force against China, surpassing Tokyo's stated defensive stance. This prompted warnings over renewed militarism and deviations from post-war commitments.

He urged Tokyo to reflect on its history and fulfill international duties, warning that rising military spending, relaxed arms-export rules, and pursuit of collective self-defense could erode commitments in the Cairo and Potsdam Declarations.