Wednesday, June 19, 2013   

Academics wrestle with disputed islands issues
(01-29 11:32)

As fears grow over a simmering island dispute between China and Japan, scholars from both nations are hoping to lower the temperature with expansive talks in Washington in search of common ground.
The academics acknowledged that Tokyo and Beijing have major differences over the territories in the East China Sea but they saw one fundamental point in common — neither side wanted the conflict to escalate into war, AFP reports.
A pair of US-based scholars from the two countries brought together experts –
four from China, three from Japan – all day Sunday to hear out views on the islands known as the Senkakus in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese.
The Chinese co-convener, Zheng Wang, found a “huge perception gap’’ between the two sides and said that rising nationalism in Asia's two largest economies made it difficult for leaders to take any action that could be seen as weak.
“Each side sees themselves as the victim and the other as the aggressor – ‘they take aggressive behavior to change the status quo, and we are peace-loving countries,’ ’’ said Wang, a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
The Washington talks did not involve government representatives but several participants made suggestions in a personal capacity.
Tatsushi Arai, a visiting scholar of conflict resolution at George Mason University who convened the session with Wang, said his proposal amounted to “agree to disagree, through peaceful means.’’ Arai laid out three options, including Japan affirming its sovereignty but acknowledging China's position. Japan insists that the islands are not disputed territory.
Conversely, China could stand by its claims but acknowledge Japan’s position, or the two sides could both acknowledge differences. The two countries could afterward work on a code of conduct for the waters.
With any of the options, “the Japanese side doesn't have to compromise on the territorial claim and the Chinese side does not have to; however, they agree to disagree,’’ Arai said.
Robert Hathaway, the director of the Wilson Center's Asia program who helped organize the session, said the territorial dispute remained complex but that all scholars agreed it would be “heightened folly’’ to let the situation spin out of control.
   
Other World breaking news:
Rape accused British politician Evans faces more charges of indecent assault (1 hr 47 mins ago)
Insensitive Japanese politicians sink in social media swamp (2 hrs 15 mins ago)
Thailand cuts subsidy to rice farmers (2 hrs 19 mins ago)
Obama says spies not trawling through emails of Europeans, Merkel calls for 'proportional' approach (2 hrs 24 mins ago)
Bullies, insecure people at UK state broadcaster BBC, says investigator (2 hrs 56 mins ago)
After 10-year absence, Miss Algeria contest resumes (06-19 18:43)
Singaporeans turn on officials for smog inaction (06-19 18:27)
Russian arms store explosion destroys homes, residents flee (06-19 17:38)
120 die in India monsoon floods, 65,000 stranded (06-19 17:27)
Fukushima nuke plant spills cancerous materials that may seep into sea (06-19 17:17)

More breaking news >>

© 2013 The Standard, The Standard Newspapers Publishing Ltd.
Contact Us | About Us | Newsfeeds | Subscriptions | Print Ad. | Online Ad. | Street Pts

 


Home | Top News | Local | Business | China | ViewPoint | CityTalk | World | Sports | People | Central Station | Spree | Features

The Standard

Trademark and Copyright Notice: Copyright 2013, The Standard Newspaper Publishing Ltd., and its related entities. All rights reserved.  Use in whole or part of this site's content is prohibited.   Use of this Web site assumes acceptance of the
Terms of Use, Privacy Statement and Copyright Policy.  Please also read our Ethics Statement.