Kyodo News+ | Japan's leading news agency.

Top News

China says it will remove buoy set up in Japan's EEZ near Senkakus

China says it will remove buoy set up in Japan's EEZ near Senkakus

China has told Japan it intends to remove a buoy it installed inside Japan's exclusive economic zone near the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea, diplomatic sources said Saturday. While it is hoped the move will help stabilize strained relations between the two countries, China has not removed the buoy from the area. Japan is urging China to move the object immediately, the sources said. The Japanese government has repeatedly called for the removal since the buoy's presence was confirmed in July last year near the uninhabited, Tokyo-controlled, Beijing-claimed islets. File photo taken in September 2013 shows the Japan-controlled Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea. (Kyodo) China's motive for uninstalling the object is apparently to address the mounting number of diplomatic issues it has with Japan so that it can focus on its relationship with the United States, which will likely become turbulent following the inauguration of Donald Trump as U.S. president in January. According to the sources, China told Japan through diplomatic channels in the summer that it would remove the buoy, with Japan welcoming the move and closely monitoring the situation to make sure Beijing follows through. The topic was also discussed by officials from both countries during high-level consultations on maritime affairs in Tokyo in October. The Chinese Foreign Ministry has said the buoy was installed to monitor ocean currents and weather. Some observers said the data including water temperature has been collected and used by the Chinese military. It appears China has determined that moving the buoy to the Chinese side of the EEZ's median line would not make much difference to the data obtained, the sources said. Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba met with Chinese President Xi Jinping for the first time in Peru last week, where he expressed serious concerns about the situation in the East China Sea and the increased activity by the Chinese military. Related coverage: China admits plane entered Japan airspace in August but unintentional China enters Japan waters days after air violation protested Japan coast guard plans to build its largest patrol vessel

Kyodo News Digest: Nov. 24, 2024

Nov 24, 2024 | KYODO NEWS


Atomic bomb survivors meet fundraising target for Nobel prize awarding

Nov 24, 2024 | KYODO NEWS


South Korea to skip Japan's Sado mine event to remember laborers

Nov 23, 2024 | KYODO NEWS


Japanese becomes 1st non-Spanish to win prestigious flamenco contest

Nov 23, 2024 | KYODO NEWS


Dam fine vintage: Japan sake brewers take novel approach to storage

2 hours ago | KYODO NEWS

Spotlight Japan

Foreign tourists showing appetite for Japan's art of food replicas

Hands-on lessons in the art of creating food replicas have caught on with foreign visitors keen to learn more about a distinctive Japanese craft that has evolved for over 100 years.

Nov 21, 2024 | Spotlight Japan



Kyodo Visual Stories

2025 World Expo

Partners