China sees no basis for talks with Japan over islands dispute
China sees no reason to hold talks with Japan over their dispute about ownership of a group of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea, Chinese deputy foreign minister Li Baodong said on Tuesday, according to Reuters.
Relations between the world's second- and third-largest economies have been strained for months, largely because of the spat over the islands, known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is keen to improve ties and has called for high-level dialogue with China, though he has rejected any conditions on talks and China has shown no inclination to even want talks.
Li said Japan's call for high-level talks was not genuine, but merely grandstanding.
"A meeting between leaders is not simply for the sake of shaking hands and taking pictures, but to resolve problems," Li told reporters ahead of President Xi Jinping's attendance at the G20 summit next week.
"If Japan wants to arrange a meeting to resolve problems, they should stop with the empty talk and doing stuff for show," Li said, when asked about the possibility of a meeting of Chinese and Japanese leaders on the sidelines of the G20.
Aircraft and ships from both countries have played a cat-and-mouse game near the islands for months, ratcheting up tension.
Japan's Coast Guard said on Tuesday that three Chinese Coast Guard vessels had entered what Japan considered to be its territorial waters near the disputed islands. China said the trip was a routine patrol in its own waters.
Moves by some Japanese politicians to deny the country's wartime past do not help, Li added.
"Under these conditions, how can we organize the kind of leaders' summit that Japan wants?" Li said.