China has canceled a high-level military trip to Japan, state press said yesterday, as the neighbors bicker over a disputed island chain and a recent Uighur symposium in Tokyo that angered Beijing.
Guo Boxiong (郭伯雄), vice chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission and China’s highest ranking military officer, will not visit Japan due to a “work commitment” at home, the China Daily said, citing the defense ministry.
The visit was due to begin today, with Guo scheduled to meet Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda.
The ministry refused immediate comment on Guo’s trip when contacted by Agence France-Presse, but the cancelation comes after China condemned Japan for allowing the World Uyghur Congress, which Beijing considers an exiled “anti-China” separatist grouping, to hold a meeting in Tokyo last week.
Uighurs are a predominantly Muslim ethnic minority who mainly live in western China’s Xinjiang region and have long chafed under Beijing’s rule.
Last month, China also angrily condemned remarks by Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara, who re-ignited a long-simmering maritime territorial dispute by vowing to purchase a group of uninhabited islands at the center of the row.
Ishihara, an outspoken critic of Beijing who has made a career out of provocative nationalistic remarks, said he had approached the owner of the islands in the East China Sea, called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyutai Islands (釣魚台) in China and Taiwan, which also lays claim to them.
In 2010, relations between China and Japan hit a low point after Japanese authorities arrested a Chinese captain for ramming his trawler against Japanese coastguard ships in the disputed area near the islands.
Despite their numerous political rows, China and Japan remain vigorous trading partners. Leaders of the two nations recently agreed to begin free trade negotiations that will also include South Korea.
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