Japanese lawmakers leave after entry ban
Criticism high over Tokyo¡¯s repeated territorial
claim
Three Japanese lawmakers returned to their country after spending
hours at a South Korean airport on Monday, after Seoul stopped them from
visiting an eastern island in protest of Tokyo¡¯s repeated territorial claims.
Defying South Korea¡¯s warning made days earlier, the three right wing
politicians arrived at Gimpo International Airport,
only to be held back at the immigration check point and asked to return via the
next plane to Tokyo.
The Tokyo politicians remained at the airport
waiting room for nearly nine hours claiming Seoul had no right to ban them from
entering a free country.
Yoshitaka Shindo,
Tomomi Inada and Masahisa Sato, all belonging to
Japan¡¯s opposition Liberal Democratic Party, appear to have pushed ahead with
the plan to visit the South Korean island of Ulleungdo
in the belief that video footage of them being barred from entry would help them
win support from right wingers back at home, analysts here
say.
Getting on Japan¡¯s All Nippon Airways 8:10 p.m. flight, Rep. Shindo said he would
¡°return to South Korea again.¡±
¡°I will talk more in a press conference
back in Japan,¡± he told reporters in Seoul.
Upon his arrival earlier
Monday, the right wing lawmaker had claimed Dokdo
belonged to his country adding that ¡°discussions are necessary as disputes
remain.¡±
Tokyo has for years laid territorial claims over the South
Korean volcanic islets of Dokdo -- located about 90
kilometers east of Ulleungdo -- often posing a
stumbling block to mending ties with Korea, which was under Japanese colonial
rule from 1910-45.
Dokdo, called Takeshima by the Japanese, is a group of small islets that
lie in rich fishing grounds in the East Sea between South Korea and Japan, which
also are believed to contain large gas deposits.
The latest dispute
erupted when the Japanese politicians said they would visit Ulleungdo to see for themselves ¡°how South Koreans feel¡±
about the issue that has been straining ties between the two neighboring
countries for six decades.
As the politicians were refusing to leave the
country and staying at the airport waiting room for hours, the deputy chief of
the Japanese mission in Seoul called the Foreign Ministry to express regret
about the entry ban, a high-ranking official here said on the condition of
customary anonymity.
Japan¡¯s top government spokesman Yukio Edano called South Korea¡¯s action ¡°deeply regrettable¡±
during a news conference in Tokyo Monday.
¡°Considering the friendly ties
between Japan and South Korea, we have informed them that it is deeply
regrettable that South Korea took such action against the lawmakers from our
country, and we have asked them to reconsider and allow them to enter¡± the
country, Edano said.
South Korea sees the
high-profile trip to the island as an attempt by Japan to renew its longstanding
territorial claims on Dokdo and believes it does not
need to overreact. Seoul has for years kept a policy of not reacting strongly to
Tokyo¡¯s claims, believing it has no reason to draw international attention to an
island that clearly belongs to the country.
A rightist Japanese
professor, who had attempted to visit Ulleungdo
quietly by himself, was also barred from entering Korea on Sunday, according to
the Justice Ministry in Seoul.
Shimojo Masao,
a Takushoku University professor who reportedly
arranged the Tokyo politicians¡¯ trip to the South Korean island, arrived at
Incheon International Airport via an Asiana Airlines flight late Sunday. Immediately denied
entry, he returned via the next flight, the ministry said.
Anti-Japanese
sentiment ran high as civic groups denounced the Japanese politicians¡¯ move.
The Voluntary Agency Network of Korea, a non-governmental group seeking
to set right what it sees as Japan¡¯s distortion of history, asked the government
¡°not to be fooled by Japan¡¯s political drama to make Dokdo seem like a disputed island¡± and ¡°stay
calm.¡±
About 50 students of Dokdo Academy
staged a performance as Japanese lawmakers arrived at the airport earlier
Monday, a move their teachers described as ¡°voluntary and peaceful.¡± The Dokdo Academy was established in 2007 to teach university
students about Korea¡¯s territorial sovereignty over Dokdo.
Lee Jae-oh, a lawmaker of Seoul¡¯s ruling party
and also President Lee Myung-bak¡¯s special affairs
minister, landed on Dokdo on Monday, vowing to stay on
the easternmost islets until the Tokyo politicians return to their country.
Some members of conservative groups here protested more strongly,
spraying chili powder over the Japanese national flag.
Meanwhile, the
Tokyo government is set to publish a new defense white paper that reiterates
Japan¡¯s territorial claim to Dokdo as early as
Tuesday, a move the Seoul government fears will worsen the anti-Japan sentiment
here.
¡°We have various plans set up to deal with this calmly, but
firmly,¡± a high-ranking Foreign Ministry official told reporters, asking not to
be named. ¡°But we will try not to make this issue strain bilateral ties with
Japan excessively.¡±
After publishing the first book in 1970, Tokyo has
been releasing new defense white papers annually since 1976. In the book, Japan
claims ¡°there are unsolved issues¡± regarding Dokdo
¡°which is Japan¡¯s territory.¡±
Criticizing the Japanese politicians¡¯
move, political parties here noted the need to refrain from overreacting so as
not to draw too much international attention and make it seem as though there
are disputes over Dokdo.
The latest diplomatic
tensions over Dokdo started early last month when
Japan imposed a one-month ban on the use of Korean Air flights by its diplomats
in retaliation for the airline¡¯s June 16 test flight of its first Airbus A380
above Dokdo.
Tokyo¡¯s ruling Democratic Party
may believe that the boycott of Korean Air and the publication of a new defense
white paper will help it project an image it is committed to protecting
territorial sovereignty, further straining ties with Seoul, analysts say.
Dismissing Tokyo¡¯s repeated claims as nonsense because South Korea
reclaimed sovereignty over the mainland as well as several islands around the
peninsula after independence, Seoul has stationed Coast Guard officers on Dokdo since 1954. Two citizens live on the islets.
The Source: The Korea Herald