South Korea has warned Japan
over its renewed claims to the disputed Liancourt Rocks Islands, vowing a
firm response against any attempt to challenge Seoul’s “sovereignty” of
the islet chain.
On Tuesday, South Korea’s Defense
Ministry summoned a military official at the Japanese Embassy to hear
Seoul’s protest against the “unjustified territorial claims to”
Liancourt Rocks, known as Dokdo in Korea, that was made at Japan's
annual Defense White Paper on Tuesday.
“Korea’s Ministry of
National Defense will firmly react against any attempts to infringe upon
the sovereignty of the Dokdo Islets, and will seamlessly protect our
rights to the Dokdo Islets,” the ministry said in a statement.
Separately,
the South Korean Foreign Ministry called in the deputy minister of the
Japanese Embassy, Maruyama Kouhei, over the issue.
Seoul “strongly
condemns [Tokyo] for once again including its unjustified territorial
claims to Dokdo, which is clearly our territory in terms of history,
geography and international law,” said the ministry spokesman, Cho
June-hyuck.
Cho urged Tokyo to withdraw the claims immediately to guarantee “mutual trust” in their future relations. Dokdo Islands (called Takeshima by Japan) is 215 kilometers from South Korea and 250 kilometers from Japan.“The
Japanese government should immediately stop its useless claims to
Dokdo, and face up squarely to the truth of history and put all efforts
into the relations between South Korea and Japan towards a new future
based upon trust,” he added.
The islets, which are called
Takeshima in Japan and Dokdo, are located in waters between Korea and
Japan. They are believed to be rich in natural gas and other resources.
Seoul,
which has controlled the islands since the end of the Japanese colonial
rule after World War II, denounces Japan’s claims as stemming from its
colonial past. Japan occupied large parts of China and the Korean
Peninsula during World War II.
Relations between Seoul and Tokyo,
which have long been strained over the war history, improved since
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe met South Korean President Park
Geun-hye last month in Seoul.
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