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Puck The Texan
Joined: 05 Jan 2004 Posts: 5596
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Sun Apr 10, 2005 9:50 am Japan is Target in Chinese Protests |
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CNN.com
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Japan protection call over protests
BEIJING, China (CNN) -- Japan's ambassador has called on the Chinese government to take stronger measures to protect its citizens as thousands of protesters demand a boycott of Japanese products and shout anti-Japanese slogans.
The protests are aimed at Japan's bid to become a permanent U.N. Security Council member and have been made more emotional by Chinese objections to how Japanese school textbooks recount Japan's 20th century military campaigns.
Sunday's protest by about 20,000 protesters in two cities in the southern Guangdong province followed Saturday's angry demonstration at Japan's embassy in Beijing.
About 10,000 Chinese surrounded Japan's consulate in Guangzhou, capital of the Guangdong province, carrying anti-Japanese banners and Chinese flags while they sang, shouted and chanted. Several Japanese flags were burned.
About 10,000 Chinese also marched on a Japanese department store in the city of Shenzhen, also in the Guangdong province.
Japanese press attache Ide Keiji told reporters Sunday that Japan's envoy Koreshige Anami talked by phone with Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister and called Saturday's protest, in which rocks and bottles were thrown at the Japanese embassy, "gravely regrettable."
Ambassador Anami also asked the Chinese government to take all necessary measures to protect Japanese citizens in China, Ide said.
The Japanese spokesman said the Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister expressed regret on behalf of his government for the Saturday protest and said the Chinese government could not allow it to happen again.
The protests are targeted at Japan's bid to become a permanent U.N. Security Council member and have been made more emotional by Chinese objections to how Japanese school textbooks recount Japan's 20th century military campaigns.
The protesters in Beijing Saturday chanted anti-Japanese slogans, sang patriotic songs, waved Chinese flags and carried banners critical of Japan.
Some protesters threw rocks and plastic water bottles toward the embassy gate. The messages included a call for China to boycott Japanese products.
Hundreds of military police in riot gear lined up outside the embassy, while hundreds more police blocked nearby streets to keep the number of protesters down. Police moved in to end the protest after about an hour.
It was the biggest protest in the Chinese capital since 1999 when angry crowds demonstrated outside the U.S. Embassy after three Chinese were killed when the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, in what was then the Yugoslav capital, was accidentally bombed.
That came during the NATO air war against the Serb-led forces in the Serbian province of Kosovo, where Serbs and ethnic Albanians had been fighting.
CNN correspondent Tara Duffy contributed to this report
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Kylon Lieutenant Commander
Joined: 03 Jun 2002 Posts: 292 Location: In a distant galaxy far far away...
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Sat Apr 16, 2005 5:34 pm |
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Hope the Japanese win, the Chinese have a bad record of human rights violations, and they aren't too keen on democracy either.
If the Japanese were to get a permanent standing in the U.N that would be beneficial to the U.S I think, due to the fact they are more westernized, and they emulate and assimilate alot of our culture.
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Imagination is more important than knowledge.
Albert Einstein
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Zeke Zabertini Captain
Joined: 13 Sep 2002 Posts: 4832
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Sun Apr 17, 2005 12:00 am |
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Well, keep in mind that the Chinese have good reason to be pissed off at the Japanese. Japan's army was none too kind in its occupation and repression of China in the second world war. I agree though, it's time to put that behind them.
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WeAz Commodore
Joined: 03 Apr 2004 Posts: 1519 Location: Where you aren't
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Sun Apr 17, 2005 8:44 pm |
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back then Japan was a militaristic dictatorship, thevey changed a lot
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At Least In Vietnam, Bush Had An Exit Strategy
It was Bush, not Clinton, who ignored the warning signs for 9/11.
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Seven of Nine Sammie's Mammy
Joined: 16 Jun 2001 Posts: 7871 Location: North East England
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Mon Apr 18, 2005 2:31 pm |
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Ah, but the fight is about the textbooks. Without seeing what they say, I can't really form an opinion. However, if the Chinese are right in saying they gloss over Japan's history, then they've got every right to protest. I juts think they should do it peacefully. After all, we have to learn here all about the British Empire, slavery, and the other bad parts to our history.
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