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Sunday, January 2, 2011
CHINA & JAPAN: Small Islands – Big Problem: Senkaku/Diaoyu and the Weight of History and Geography in China-Japan Relations
By Gavan McCormack
“Senkaku Islands Colonization Day”
In December 2010, the Okinawan city of Ishigaki (within which Japanese administrative law incorporates these islands) adopted a resolution to declare 14 January to be “Senkaku Islands Colonization Day.” The “Colonization Day” is intended to commemorate the incorporation of the islands by cabinet decision 116 years earlier. China immediately protested.
Ishigaki was following the model of the Shimane Prefectural Assembly, which in 2005 declared a “Takeshima Day” in commemoration of the Japanese state’s incorporation 100 years earlier of the islands known in Japan as Takeshima but in South Korea (which occupies and administers them) as Tokdo. That Shimane decision prompted fierce protests in South Korea. The Ishigaki decision seems likely to do no less in China. Why should these barren rocks, inhabited only by endangered short-tailed albatross, be of such importance to otherwise great powers? Whose islands are they? How should the contest over them be resolved?
CHINA: What's Next in 2011?
In the past, Chinese officials insisted their foreign policy strategy was to "lie low". But as America's influence dims, China's demanding attention. Celia Hatton asks, what's next for Asia in 2011?
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S. KOREA: For South Korean teen, golf comes first
Like thousands of other young golfers in South Korea, 17-year-old Eom Jae-moon is expected to excel, turn pro and win tournaments. (Matt Douma) |
By John M. Glionna, Los Angeles Times
More than a decade after South Korean golfers burst onto the international scene, Jae-moon's tale illustrates the intense national pride in the success stories of recent years, but also an unsettling side to the country's mania for golf.
In a nation obsessed with success, thousands of young golfers soon learn a tough lesson: More than just playing the game, they're expected to excel, turn pro and win tournaments, making their families proud. The schedules of many youths are managed as closely as those of Olympic-hopeful figure skating or gymnastics prodigies around the globe...
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