BEIJING (AP) â" Old wounds amplified outrage over a burning territorial dispute Tuesday as thousands of Chinese protested Tokyoâs purchase of islands claimed by Beijing and marked the 81st anniversary of a Japanese invasion that China has never forgotten.
China marks every Sept. 18 by blowing sirens to remember a 1931 incident that Japan used as a pretext to invade Manchuria, setting off a brutal occupation of China that ended only at the close of World War II. Demonstrations are not routine, but this year, as Chinese fume over last weekâs Japanese purchase of long-contested islands in the East China Sea, they spread across the country.
Outside the Japanese Embassy in Beijing, thousands of protesters shouted patriotic slogans and demanded boycotts of Japanese goods. Some burned Japanese flags and threw apples, water bottles and eggs at the embassy, which was heavily guarded by three layers of paramilitary police and metal barricades.
ââI came here so our islands will not be invaded by Japan,ââ said Wang Guoming, a retired soldier and seller of construction materials who said he came to the embassy from Linfen in Shanxi province to vent his frustration.
ââWe believe we need to declare war on them because the Japanese devils are too evil. Down with little Japan!ââ he said.
Protests also took place in Guangzhou, Wenzhou, Shanghai and other Chinese cities. Japanâs Kyodo news agency reported that protesters were throwing bricks and rocks at the Japanese consulate in Shenyang in Chinaâs northeast, but local police said by telephone there was no unrest.
Chinaâs authoritarian government rarely allows protests, and the wave of anti-Japanese demonstrations clearly received a degree of official approval.
Many Japanese businesses across China shut their doors as a precaution following recent protests that turned violent and saw the torching and looting of Japanese-invested factories and shops.
The nationalist fervor spread to the Internet, where users of the popular search engine Baidu saw a huge Chinese flag planted on a cartoon image of the contested islands, which China calls the Diaoyus and Japan calls the Senkakus. And all members of Chinaâs elite badminton team, who scored multiple gold medals in the London Olympics, pulled out of a Japanese tournament that began Tuesday.
The islands are tiny rock outcroppings that have been a sore point between China and Japan for decades. Japan has claimed the islands since 1895. The U.S. took jurisdiction after World War II and turned them over to Japan in 1972.
The disagreement escalated last week when the Japanese government said it was purchasing some of the islands from their private owner. Japan considers it an attempt to thwart a potentially more inflammatory move by the governor of Tokyo, who had wanted not only to buy the islands but develop them. But Beijing sees Japanâs purchase as an affront to its claims and its past calls for negotiations.
Beijing has sent patrol ships inside Japanese-claimed waters around the islands, and some state media have urged Chinese to show their patriotism by boycotting Japanese goods and canceling travel to Japan.
Protests since Tokyoâs purchase have been the largest anti-Japanese demonstrations since 2005. They reflect not only Chinaâs strident opposition to surrendering any land it claims, but generations of Chinese anger over Tokyoâs colonial history that periodically bursts to the surface.
While Japan routinely apologizes for its wartime actions, its politicians often anger China by visiting the Yasukuni Shrine, a memorial to Japanâs war dead, including top war criminals.
Some right-wing Japanese politicians continue to provoke China by questioning Japanese atrocities during the war, such as the ââRape of Nanking,ââ which historians say resulted in the slaughter of at least 150,000 civilians. China puts the number killed at 300,000, making it one of the worst atrocities of the World War II era.
In Beijing, streams of people marched past the embassy in orderly groups of about 150 people, herded by police who urged them to remain calm and peaceful. Some toted posters of Chairman Mao Zedong, and many shouted slogans such as: ââUnited, Love China, Never forget our national shame.ââ
Sun Chao, who works for a Beijing tutoring company, said he was given the day off and came to demonstrate with about a dozen other friends and colleagues. He spent around 150 yuan (US$24) on apples and bottled water that he was handing out on the demonstration route, encouraging people to hurl them at the embassy.Continued...
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