Japan, China ministers make first call on defence hotline
Sign up now: Get insights on Asia's fast-moving developments
Japanese Defence Minister Yasukazu Hamada (left) held a 20-minute call with his Chinese counterpart Li Shangfu.
PHOTOS: AFP
Follow topic:
TOKYO - Japan and China used a new military hotline for the first time on Tuesday, their defence ministries said, following years of negotiations to set up the communication channel.
Japanese Defence Minister Yasukazu Hamada held a 20-minute call with his Chinese counterpart, Mr Li Shangfu, Tokyo’s ministry said in a statement.
“Hamada mentioned the existence of security concerns between Japan and China, such as the situation in the East China Sea,” it said, and he “stated that it is necessary to have candid communication, especially when there are concerns about Japan-China relations”.
Beijing confirmed the call, saying the air and maritime hotline would “contribute to further maintaining regional peace and stability”.
The hotline, launched on March 31, had been mooted by both sides for over a decade as a way to avert unexpected clashes in the East China Sea.
A territorial dispute over islets in the area known as the Senkaku by Tokyo and the Diaoyu by Beijing has long fuelled tensions between the countries.
Japan, wary of its neighbour’s growing military power, has publicly protested against the presence of Chinese vessels around the disputed islets, and in other regions including near Okinawa.
As the world’s second- and third-largest economies, China and Japan are key trading partners, and in 2022 marked 50 years of diplomatic relations.
But ties between them are often fraught, and soured in December when Japan announced a security overhaul including more defence spending, calling China its “greatest strategic challenge ever”.
Nonetheless, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida recently said he wants “constructive and stable” ties with China.
Mr Kishida met Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of a summit in 2022, Japan’s foreign minister visited Beijing in April
This week, Mr Kishida is hosting Group of Seven (G-7) leaders in Hiroshima, where the bloc’s relationship with China will be high on the agenda.
At a G-7 foreign ministers’ meeting in April, seen as setting the stage for the summit, the group warned Beijing over “militarisation activities” in the South China Sea. AFP

