Xi vows to be firm on island controversies


(MENAFN- The Peninsula) Chinese President Xi Jinping said in a key foreign policy speech that the rising Asian nation would protect its sovereign territory, the Xinhua news agency reported, as it faces maritime disputes with several neighbours.

"We should firmly uphold China's territorial sovereignty, maritime rights and interests and national unity," Xi told a Communist Party meeting on foreign affairs held on Friday and Saturday, according to excerpts of his speech released by Xinhua yesterday.

Ties between China and Japan have been strained over the past two years after Tokyo nationalised the Senkaku islands - which it already administered - in the East China Sea. Beijing also claims the chain, which it calls the Diaoyu islands.

China and Southeast Asian countries - including Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines and Brunei - also have competing claims for the Spratly islands in the South China Sea.

Taiwan, which China considers part of its sovereign territory, also has a claim to part of the Spratlys.

Xi, both China's president and Communist Party secretary, added his country would "properly handle territorial and island disputes" but did not name them.

Relations between China and Japan have improved after Xi and Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe met on November 10, but Chinese coastguard ships have continued to patrol waters around the disputed islands.

On a more conciliatory note, Xi told officials at the meeting that China sought "peaceful development" and opposed the "wilful use or threat of force".

The leaders of the United States, Australia and Japan earlier this month called for peaceful resolutions of maritime disputes, after US President Barack Obama warned of the dangers of outright conflict in Asia as China contests disputed territory.

China views the US foreign policy "pivot" to the Asia-Pacific region as an attempt to contain it.

The Chinese leader made no direct reference to the United States in the portions of his speech released by Xinhua, other than saying Beijing should "manage well" relations with other major countries.

"We should fully recognise the uncertainty in China's neighbouring environment, but we should also realise that the general trend of prosperity and stability in the Asia-Pacific region will not change," Xi said.

Meanwhile, a group of British lawmakers investigating Britain's relations with Hong Kong have been told China will not allow them into the former colony, the MPs said yesterday.

The Foreign Affairs Committee, a panel of lawmakers who scrutinise the Foreign Office's work, is looking into Britain's relations with the Chinese special administrative region 30 years on from the 1984 Joint Declaration, which set out the terms of the 1997 handover of Hong Kong.

Richard Ottaway, who chairs the cross-party panel, said he would today call for an emergency debate in parliament on the situation. The 11-member committee, which reports to the lower House of Commons, planned to visit Hong Kong before the end of the year as part of its inquiry.

"The Chinese government have, in past weeks and months, registered their opposition to the inquiry," the committee said.


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