Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Sunday, May 25, 2014

GTF explores legal options on banned organizations and people by SL government


gtf-1GTF has been exploring its legal options and will be taking the necessary steps in the coming weeks. 
Many countries have come out publicly through formal statements, through formal meetings and some even in their respective parliaments have stated that they do not recognise this ban.


A letter received by a member organisation ATC from Australian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
atc
Canadian Government Press Release
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/news-communiques/2014/04/30a.aspx

The UK Government Minister with responsibility for Sri Lanka, Rt. Hon Mr Hugo Swire MP, states that the proscription of Tamil diaspora organisations and individuals by the Sri Lankan authorities is “not conducive to a successful reconciliation process” and, once again, raises “serious concerns about respect for human rights in Sri Lanka”.

The Minister’s answers to questions posed by Mr Virendra Sharma MP, can be found here:
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201314/cmhansrd/cm140512/text/140512w0002.htm#14051310000147

The US Assistant Secretary State Biswal holds extensive talks with Tamil groups affiliated to banned groups, …..
http://www.sundaytimes.lk/140504/columns/94547-94547.html
Questions relating to the TNA Statement can be directed to Mr M A Sumanthiran MP.
tna letter

Treating students like children


article_image
By Rohana R. Wasala-May 25, 2014


Around 5,000 students marched from Kelaniya close to the Presidential secretariat to protest against a series of issues related to university students. (file photo)

Students or other citizens for that matter should never be treated like criminals by the police with or without apparent reasons; it is up to the courts to pass judgment on them based on evidence. However, there cannot be any objection from the general public to them being apprehended as criminal suspects by the police when they are found to disobey court orders, but this should be done humanely without violating the basic human rights of the students and it should be done within the law; the humanity of the police personnel (mostly coming from the same social background as the protesting students, and even less privileged perhaps) must also be respected. 
The Island editorial under the title Treating students like criminals (21 May 2014), in my opinion, hit the nail on the head regarding the long unsettled problem of the controversial curtailment of the Allied Health Sciences course at the Peradeniya University by one year. In a situation where the authorities concerned are trying to pass the buck to someone else and where some otherwise highly regarded professionals are said to be opposing a restoration of the originally stipulated four year duration of that course, and where certain disgruntled, discredited, and opportunistic politicians are trying to fuel student unrest just to assert their presence and also where the law enforcement functionaries seem to be at their tether’s end, a supreme court intervention should perhaps be sought in order to protect the students.


I, for one, believe that ultimately it is the rulers who take responsibility. Why is this apparent lack of concern on their part that has led to such a pass being prolonged? A sign on the desk of Mr Truman, a distinguished former US president, read: "The buck stops here"! That was the great Truman. But it seems that we have only false men here! The less said about them the better it is for our own sanity and peace of mind.


Students or other citizens for that matter should never be treated like criminals by the police with or without apparent reasons; it is up to the courts to pass judgment on them based on evidence. However, there cannot be any objection from the general public to them being apprehended as criminal suspects by the police when they are found to disobey court orders, but this should be done humanely without violating the basic human rights of the students and it should be done within the law; the humanity of the police personnel (mostly coming from the same social background as the protesting students, and even less privileged perhaps) must also be respected. The very few offending students there are must be made to realize that they cannot act in contravention of the law of the land with impunity and that laws are there for the protection of the persons as well as the rights of all citizens including them. But it takes adults to understand this, and it is up to the students to think and act as adults, and not like spoilt children.


To my mind there appear to be two emerging trends in the manner that some important sections of the adult population choose to treat students in this country. The two modes of interaction (or rather non-interaction) that have come into to being between adults and young students as a result are stark opposites. One way was recently demonstrated by the alleged rough handling by the police of some young activists connected with illegal student protests in Colombo during the World Conference on Youth; the police stand accused of treating the demonstrating students like criminals. While disapproving of violence by both sides, many inconvenienced common people feel that certain violent elements among the majority of innocent students deserve to be treated as criminals, and that some sort of firm control of the occasional disruptive behaviour of students must be imposed by the authorities. So one way that our society likes to deal with unruly students is to treat them like criminals. The other emerging trend, in my view, is for adults, particularly certain politicians and a handful of media persons, to treat or more frequently to talk about students in higher educational institutions as well as those in schools as if they were mere ‘children’ yet to be potty-trained. The emotive Sinhalese word ‘daruwan’ (children) is often heard these days piously enunciated by a few politicos in power and their stooges in the media. The attitude that is revealed in this second way in which people try to verbally mollycoddle the youth of the country and keep them subdued is much more hypocritical, and hence more condemnable, than the first (i.e. treating students like criminals) which surely we will see the last of soon enough.


University students are adults themselves or at least are on the threshold of adulthood, though among them there could be a tiny handful of individuals who expect to be treated as ‘children’ (which itself could be a hangover from parental spoiling back home!). It is demeaning for young persons to be described or addressed as ‘daruwan’ (children) in situations where their normal personal development into adulthood is vitally important. A child is a young human being passing through the years between the time of birth and the time that he or she is about to be accepted into adult society (which is legally termed the age of majority). Most countries including ours set the age of majority at 18, which makes it possible for Sri Lankans just past their 18th birthday to vote at parliamentary elections. So, even legally most of our students in higher education institutions, being above 18, fall into the category of adults.


Astrophysicist Dr Neil DeGrasse Tyson says that a normal child (a young human) is born a scientist, by which he means that children by their biological nature are independent explorers of their surroundings. True, human babies are more dependent on parents or other adult guardians for their protection and survival than the young of other animal species; but they are naturally ever eager to assume control over themselves and their environment, for that potential is their genetic inheritance. So their search for independence starts early, something most parents understand by experience. Certain, normally too protective, uninformed or poorly informed, Lankan parents, however, see this as a child’s insubordination to adult guidance or mere love of mischief; and they might resort to various stratagems or raw punishment to control their ‘waywardness’, thereby actually suppressing or totally eliminating the child’s independent spirit and creativity which is their birthright. What a child instinctively wants is to be or act like a grownup. Parents and other adult members of the human society have a responsibility to do everything possible to help young people to develop normally into adulthood. To keep young persons constantly reminded of their ‘childhood’, as some fond parents and crafty politicians do, is not the best way to promote the development of mature traits in them.


A few politicians and their journalistic fellow travelers (particularly in some government TV channels) have suddenly grown fond of the term ‘daruwan’ to refer to young people who are actually no longer children. Obviously, these people mean to exhibit an almost parental concern with the welfare of the students by casually adopting that loaded word in the Sinhala language (‘daruwan’) in talking about them. But everybody knows that they are hypocrites, that they only want to keep young students from creating trouble for the establishment through legitimate protests and other demonstrations in asserting their right to influence government policies that affect them. Trying to treat young adults (students in higher education) as if they were immature ‘daruwan’ (children) without instead assigning them adult responsibilities to fulfil could turn them into real ‘maruwan’ (murderers), as happened in a Sri Lankan university not so long ago.

Sri Lanka’s external debt sustainability: Complacency based on incomplete analysis may be the worst enemy

Sunday 25th May 2014
Central Bank’s communication with the public is a good sign
The Central Bank’s Public Debt Department in a recent press release had informed the public that Sri Lanka had continued to improve its external debt sustainability indicators (available at: www.cbsl.gov.lk ).
These indicators, according to the Central Bank, had been computed “in accordance with the Manual of (sic) Effective Debt Management of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP)”. Apparently, the objective of the Central Bank would have been to allay the fears of the people that the country is heading toward an external debt crisis – a view which they had heard from many critics. It is, therefore, not unusual for some printed media to consider the communication important enough to be reported on their front pages with bold headlines.
75 IPs file FR 

By Stanley Samarasinghe-May 26, 2014 
 
 
Seventy five Inspectors of Police have filed a Fundamental Rights Application against the promotion of 229 Police Inspectors to rank of Chief Inspectors.
 
 
In their petition, filed through Attorney-at-Law Gowry Shangary Thavarasa, the petitioners claimed that grave irreparable loss, damage and prejudice had been caused to them by the promotions of 229 officers and urged the Court to issue an interim order restraining the respondents from acting in pursuance of their promotions.
 
 
IGP illangakoon, Secretary Ministry of Law and Order Nanda Mallawarachchi, retired Deputy Inspector General of Police K.E.L. Perera, Chairman and Secretary of Public Service Commission and members, M.R. Latiff Deputy Inspector General of Police (Training) M.R.A.R. Waidyalankara Deputy Inspector General of Police, A.M. Amarasinghe Asst. Director of Combined Services Ministry of Public Service and Home Affairs,... M.D. Madusanka, Asst Secretary of Public Service and Home Affairs and all the persons promoted to Rank of Chief Inspectors have been cited as respondents.
 
 
The petitioners stated that the IGP on September 4, 2013 called for applications from eligible persons holding the rank of Inspector for promotion to rank of Chief Inspector. The eligibility criteria stated there in was eight years of active service in the rank of inspector of police as at 25-9-2013 in the permanent cadre and unblemished record of five years service immediately preceding the date for the submission of application forms 25-9-2013.
The petitioners' states that based on seniority and merit they were all eligible for promotion to the rank of Chief Inspectors of police, but the selection and appointment of 229 to the said post of CI and the non-promotion of the petitioners was in violation of the criteria.
 
 
It is also in violation of petitioners' right to equality and equal protection of the law granted to them by Article 12(1) of the Constitution, the petitioners stated in their petition.
Sixty seven of the officers, who were promoted to the rank of the Chief Inspector, do not count eight years of active service as Inspectors in the regular service, the petitioners point out in the petition.
 
 
The petitioners also noted that the 22nd respondent was convicted of an offence under the convention against torture and other cruel-in human or degrading treatment or punishable acts, in the case 208/2008 in High Court of Kurunegala and was sentenced to two years rigorous imprisonment suspended for five years and ordered to pay Rs. 1,500 to the State as cost and one thousand rupees as compensation to the victims, The petitioners noted, the 22nd respondent has been promoted to the Rank of CI. The 195th respondent was also promoted, and he has not been confirmed in the post of Inspector and is in receipt of a salary which is applicable to the post of Sub Inspector of police.
 
 
The cut off mark for promotion was not disclosed by the respondents and 23 people who obtained lower marks have been promoted. Nine persons who have been promoted have disciplinary inquiries pending state the petitioners.
Therefore, the petitioners request the Court to declare that their Fundamental Rights have been violated, the promotions null and void and that the petitioners are eligible for the promotions.

JVP Leader Addresses Sinhala Diaspora In London

| by Victor Cherubim
( May 25, 2014, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) Anura Kumara Dissanayake, Sri Lanka M.P, on his first visit to London, as Leader of the Janatha Vimukthi Perumana (People’s Liberation Front) was given a rousing reception by a full house of Sinhala disapora at a Community Centre in Wembley Central on 24 May 2014.
He was “Meeting the People” to explain the Vision of his party in building up the country, as he outlined his policy framework.

“There is only one genuine solution for the crisis Sri Lanka is confronted with at present. It is a new social transformation that changes the present social system in its whole entity. It is a society where genuine economic development, social justice, democracy, national unity, genuine independence, individual freedom and good governance could be achieved. It needed a new society with a people’s administration that is suitable for our country and is based on new socialist policies. Such a society could be developed not with false promises but by implementing a clear and steadfast set of policies, “as outlined in the JVP Vision Statement.
Anura Dissanayake raised many issues and spoke for over two and a half hours, with pin drop silence, except during applause - a record perhaps, as someone in the audience remarked, for a talk in London, He spoke passionately about the worry of the modern evils of casino gambling, drugs, anti social acts and accompanying debt and taxes. He said, the absence of a production economy has pushed Sri Lanka into a debt trap with more overseas loans to pay for development.

He touched on the burdens of youth in education, employment and healthcare. He tried hard to be sombre and subdued. However, it appeared as if he could sense vibrancy in his audience literally edging him on, craving for more information,

He fielded many questions after his address elaborating in greater detail of the institutionalisation of the Executive functions, the inordinate burdens on the working class and the life of wealthy capitalists as well as the promotion of religious disharmony.

The suggestion perhaps, is that only a magician can solve this litany of disregards in the world of today. Where does one start to tackle this problem, was not one of the questions asked, neither was one proffered?
The atmosphere was electric. The late afternoon with thundershowers and brilliant sunshine, replicated as in Sri Lanka. The address was in Sinhala, to a Sinhala audience, clamouring for a “revolution” of sorts. Talking about Sri Lanka to this inspired audience in London was one thing, delivering it in Sri Lanka is another matter, said an elder.

It was vintage Sri Lanka with nostalgia and a treat for the senses.

Rathupaswala killer sent abroad as military attache enjoying Diplomatic privileges and immunity
(Lanka-e-News- 25.May.2014, 8.30AM) Brigadier Deshapriya Gunawardena the war criminal who gave orders to the army to shoot at the Rathupaswala residents when they were demanding drinking water , and was responsible for the ruthless killing in cold blood of two school students, and another youth who was coming to Colombo to work , has been dispatched on the sly by the Rajapakse regime as a military attaché enjoying every Diplomatic perk and privilege, to Turkey. 

It is the evil habit and criminal practice of the Rajapakse regime to appoint individuals who are tainted with war crimes charges as Ambassadors to western countries to enjoy diplomatic privileges and perks. Shavendra Silva to USA; Harendra Ranasnghe to America ; Jagath Dias to Germany (formerly); Prassanna Silva to England (formerly) ; Suraj Bansa Jaya to China; and now Brigadier Deshapriya to Turkey after the regime duping the people of the country who raised stormy protests at that time against the killings at Rathupwaswala ,by publicizing earlier that Deshapriya was interdicted over the Rathupaswala mass killings.

Chinese road workers attacked in Ragala 


BY PREMALAL WIJERATNE- May 26, 2014


Three suspects who allegedly attacked three Chinese nationals, engaged in road construction work at Neththakumbura, Harasbedda, Ragala were taken into custody by the police on Saturday.


According to the police, the Chinese nationals who arrived at the scene of a confrontation between an overseer and a group of men had been assaulted by the latter last Friday. The Chinese nationals who sustained injuries were admitted to the Walapane and Kandy hospitals. They were discharged from the hospitals after treatment yesterday, the police added.

Two outsiders who were involved in the scuffle also sustained injuries and were admitted to Kandy and Nuwara Eliya hospitals.

The three suspects who were arrested were expected to be produced before the Walapane magistrate court yesterday.

Ragala police are conducting further investigations.

Suspects Die In Police Custody

By Binoy Suriyaarachchi- Sunday, May 25, 2014
The Sunday LeaderThe mysterious death of cop killer suspect, Kahandawala Arachchige Tharuka Nilan (32), who died last Sunday (18) while in the custody of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), is the latest addition to a long list of deaths in police custody.
The police announced on the same day that the notorious suspect wanted by police for many criminal activities was killed in a confrontation with police officials, while he was being escorted to uncover a hidden weapons cache. According to the police, following details received through interrogation, a group of police officials accompanied by a Police Inspector had escorted the suspect to a forest reserve in the Kalugala area in Ududumbara in a bid to uncover the firearm reported to have been used for the crime.

US man finds lost mother in Amazon tribe

US man finds lost mother in Amazon tribe
New York PostBy Maureen Callahan-May 24, 2014
When David Good was a kid, and his friends asked where his mother was, he’d always say the same thing: She died in a car crash.

Sir Geoffrey Nice QC Announced He Will Represent Victims of Mavi Marmara at Int'l Criminal Court

http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpgMay-21-2014
Milošević-prosecutor, Sir Geoffrey Nice QC, confirms today he is representing Mavi Marmara victims at the International Criminal Court.
Mavi Marmara
The Mavi Marmara was the lead ship in the Freedom Flotilla, headed for Gaza on May 31, 2010. 60 miles off the coast, in International waters, the Israeli Navy illegally boarded the six ships of the "Gaza Freedom Flotilla", and killed nine humanitarians. They took every person on board into custody.
(LONDON) - The court is being pressed to investigate the deaths, injuries and other suffering of those on board the Mavi Marmara when, four years ago, it was part of a humanitarian convoy attacked by Israel Defence Forces (IDF).
On 31 May 2010, the IDF conducted a pre-planned attack on a flotilla of aid ships in international waters. The flotilla, consisting of 6 ships carrying passengers of very many different nationalities, travelled under the joint name of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla towards Gaza where they hoped to deliver humanitarian aid carried on board, which included medicine, repair equipment for machinery and toys for children, and thereby to break the naval blockade, which is recognised by a majority of the international human rights community – scholars and practitioners - as unlawful.
At approximately 04.00 in the morning of 31 May 2010, the IDF launched its attack on the ships, which resulted in the killing of 9 passengers on board the Mavi Marmara and the injuring of tens more. The ship was boarded, seized and taken to Ashdod where the IDF then proceeded to interrogate, humiliate and torture some of their detainees.
Once in Israeli detention, the passengers were refused access to legal representation or consultation with their respective embassies and contact with their families.
The Israeli authorities have alleged that the ships carried weaponry and munitions, allegations which have to this date been shown to be without any foundation. They also claim that the violence carried out on the ship was in self-defence from attacks by the humanitarian aid passengers.
Such a claim does not explain why – according to a UN commissioned report – live munition was fired from helicopters, or why all video footage or pictures taken by the passengers were seized and destroyed and live transmissions of news from the ship were blocked during the attack by the IDF soldiers.
This attack left many people without husbands, fathers, and sons. It left others with physical scars which will never heal; one passenger remains comatose as a result of the attack. It has left all of the passengers with the psychological scars of trauma.
Music video for "Song for Mavi Marmara" by David Rovics
Video produced by Bonnie King (Salem-News.com). 

Facebook knows what you're watching & listening to

Channel 4 NewsNewsTHURSDAY 22 MAY 2014
Facebook's phone app will soon be able to listen in to your music and TV shows - and identify them, in a new Shazam-like feature aimed at hoovering up even more of your personal data.

'Quicker and easier' conversations - and data

Petro Poroshenko wins Ukraine presidency, according to exit polls

'Chocolate king' expected to secure 56% of vote and vows to restore peace following election billed as most important since independence
Petro Poroshenko: 'Today we can definitely say all of Ukraine has voted, this is a national vote.' Photograph: Gleb Garanich/Reuters
Poroshenko, Ukraine elections
 in Donetsk and  in Kiev-Sunday 25 May 2014 
Pro-European businessman Petro Poroshenko has won a landmark presidential election in Ukraine with 56% of the vote, according to exit polls, clearing the 50% threshold to win the vote outright without a second round. Former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko was trailing far behind, with about 13%. Official results are expected overnight.
Ukrainians flocked to the polling stations on Sunday in what was seen as the most important election since independence. Millions of citizens in the restive east, however, did not vote at all, either because of separatist sympathies, feelings of intimidation by pro-Russian militia or simply for a lack of polling stations.
"Today we can definitely say all of Ukraine has voted, this is a national vote," said Poroshenko from his campaign headquarters shortly after the exit polls were released. "The first steps that we will take at beginning of presidential office should be focused on stopping the war, to put an end to this chaos and bring peace to a united Ukraine." He said that his first trip as president would be to the Donbass region.
Earlier in the day, voters said they felt the election was an important step toward solving the country's political crisis , and several repeated the oft-cited argument that they wanted Poroshenko to exceed the 50% threshold so the election would finish without a run-off vote in three weeks.
"Since Russia doesn't recognise our government, it's very important that the people say that now there is one person they support. Then the whole world will understand that their position is absurd," said Vladimir Pestenkov, an executive at an IT company.
But truck driver Alexander Pivin was one of a significant minority sceptical of Poroshenko. He voted for controversial radical politician Oleh Lyashko, the only candidate who had gone to the restive regions in the east where he has taken part in operations against separatists.
"I don't like that they're forcing Poroshenko on us as the unity candidate," Pivin said. "At this moment, when people are dying in the east, politicians shouldn't be here [Kiev] or in the west where it's peaceful, they should be at the hot spots." Lyashko came third, with 8% of the vote, according to exit polls. Turnout was reported to be high in most of the country.
"The turnout is a lot higher this time, which is good, although the election workers are barely able to keep up," said Olesya Maximenko, a vote observer with the civil society non-governmental organisation OPORA in Kiev. "These elections cost us lives and blood so, knowing the price, the least people could do is come out and vote."
In the east, polling day revealed how much work the government in Kiev has in store to bring the region back under control. It was always expected that in the separatist strongholds such as Slavyansk there would be no voting, but more surprisingly, in Donetsk, a city of close to 1 million people, not a single polling station opened. Even in the morning, sources inside the pro-Kiev administration said they hoped to have a number of polling stations open by the afternoon, but that did not happen.
In Dokuchayevsk, several of the 13 polling stations had planned to open, but in the end, none did. At School Number Three, there were plans for a late opening at 10am after the local committee finally received ballot papers overnight but, just before voting opened, a separatist representative arrived and demanded that the station was closed.
"He asked politely, but made it clear that if we did not accede, he would come back," said one of the election officials. The separatist made off with the ballot papers, and the town's only remaining polling station closed.
The closest town to normality in the region was Mariupol, scene of violence on 9 May when pro-Ukrainian forces entered the town and clashes broke out in which unarmed people were shot. Here, the majority of polling stations opened.
After oligarch Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine's richest man and an important political broker, came out in the past fortnight against the separatist movement, he also ordered his factories to provide unarmed worker patrols to ensure order in the city. The separatist barricades have been removed, and workers were standing guard at polling stations. Voting proceeded smoothly but the atmosphere was tense.
"The ballots were delivered in the dead of night, and we weren't told they were coming until the last minute," said Sergei Pashkovsky, the head of the electoral committee at polling station 239, opposite the charred shell of the regional administration, set on fire during clashes this month. "It will be the same thing tonight. We don't yet know who will pick up the ballots, and where they will be taken, but we've been told it will be done under tight security. They will tell us the details at the last minute."
Across town at School Number Seven, there are usually two polling stations, but only one had opened. As a result, half of the people who came to vote were turned away as they were 'not on the list'. Roman Moroz, head of the electoral commission, said that 9 of its 12 members had pulled out over the past week, forcing him to drag his friends along to make up the numbers and ensure the polling station could open. The original members had been intimidated or received threats, he said.
In the capital Kiev, queues at polling stations stretched for an hour or more; at the few that had opened in Mariupol, the turnout at two different polling stations by 3pm was under 20%.
There is genuine anger in the east where, in the past few weeks, many people have become more convinced by separatist ideas. There were, however, many people who wanted to vote but were unable.
"Of course I would have voted if I could have," said Sergei, 29, who was walking along the riverbank in the city. "True, I'm not sure who for, as none of the candidates are very inspiring, but anyone is better than these idiots in masks playing at war. The city is sick of them. It is time to get back to normal."
However, with a proliferation of armed groups, increasing paramilitary activity, and a population that remains deeply sceptical of Kiev – even as many people tire of the separatists – regaining control will not be an easy task for the country's new president.
Poroshenko will also have to deal with an ongoing economic crisis, with the national currency, the hryvnia, continuing to fall and public debt at a huge level. The country received a bailout from the International Monetary Fund this year tied to painful social cuts and reforms. Poroshenko will also need to steer a delicate geopolitical path, moving the country towards closer ties with Europe demanded by the Euromaidan protests that swept out the government of Viktor Yanukovych in February, while improving hostile relations with Russia, its often belligerent large neighbour.
Poroshenko has pledged to sign as soon as possible the economic part of an association agreement with the European Union, the political half of which was signed in March. The agreement will establish a free trade area and take steps toward visa-free travel, while committing Ukraine to economic and judicial reforms. He will also have to prove he can usher in a new type of politics, free of the corruption and mismanagement that dogged the Yanukovych regime.
He has said he will not seek to join Nato, a controversial idea that has split the population and worried Russian leaders. In a major sign that the Kremlin was softening its stance on Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday that Russia would work with the Kiev government after the presidential vote. Previously, Russia has refused to recognise the regime, arguing it came to power through an armed coup.

How Australia’s winking Tony Abbott became one of the world’s most unpopular prime ministers

(YouTube)Finally, the madness has taken its name: Winkgate. The gate opened when Australia’s prime minister, who has recently bungled his way from one scandal to the next, took a call from a listener on a radio show that was filmed.

China, Japan exchange barbs over action by warplanes in East China Sea

ReutersA Chinese SU-27 fighter flies over the East China Sea, in this handout photo taken May 24, 2014 and released by the Defense Ministry of Japan May 25, 2014.
CREDIT: REUTERS/DEFENSE MINISTRY OF JAPAN/HANDOUT VIA REUTERSA Chinese SU-27 fighter flies over the East China Sea, in this handout photo taken May 24, 2014 and released by the Defense Ministry of Japan May 25, 2014. REUTERS/Defense Ministry of Japan/Handout via Reuters
Japan's defence minister accused Beijing of going "over the top" in its approach to disputed territory. China's defence ministry said Japanese planes had carried out "dangerous" actions during its joint maritime exercises with Russia.(Reuters) - Japan and China on Sunday accused each other's air forces of dangerous behaviour over the East China Sea, with Japan saying Chinese aircraft had come within a few dozen metres of its warplanes.
Tensions have been running high between China and its neighbours over Beijing's assertive stance on claiming land and sea territory.
Japan's defence ministry said Chinese SU-27 fighters came as close as 50 metres (170 feet) to a Japanese OP-3C surveillance plane near disputed islets on Saturday and within 30 metres of a YS-11EB electronic intelligence aircraft.
"Closing in while flying normally over the high seas is impossible," Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera told reporters in comments broadcast on TV Asahi.
"This is a close encounter that is outright over the top."
Onodera said Japan conveyed its concerns to the Chinese side through diplomatic channels. He also said the Chinese planes were carrying missiles.
A ministry official said it was the closest Chinese warplanes had come to aircraft of Japan's Self-Defence Force.
China's defence ministry said jets were scrambled in the East China Sea on Saturday after Japanese aircraft entered its air defence zone during maritime exercises with Russia.
The ministry said the Japanese aircraft had entered the zone despite "no fly" notices being issued ahead of the exercises. China declared its air defence zone last year despite protests by Japan and the United States.
"Japanese military planes intruded on the exercise's airspace without permission and carried out dangerous actions, in a serious violation of international laws and standards, which could have easily caused a misunderstanding and even led to a mid-air accident," the statement said.
China had proposed urgent talks, it said, and demanded that Japan "respect the lawful rights of China's and Russia's navies ... and stop all reconnaissance and interference activities. Otherwise Japan will bear any and all consequences from this".
CHINESE CLAIMS
China lays claim to Japanese-administered islets in the East China Sea, known as Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. It is also pressing its claim to almost all the South China Sea, brushing aside claims by several southeast Asian states.
    China's proclamation last November of an air defence zone covering disputed islands and areas in the South China Sea has raised concerns that a minor incident could quickly escalate.
Sino-Japanese ties have long been strained by allegations in China that Japan has not properly atoned for its wartime aggression and by the spat over the uninhabited islands.
    Japan scrambled fighter jets against Chinese planes 415 times in the year ended in March, up 36 percent on the year, while in waters near the disputed islands, patrol ships from both countries have been playing cat-and-mouse, raising fears of an accidental clash.
    Japanese land, sea and air forces joined last week to simulate the recapture of a remote island, underscoring Tokyo's concerns about the security of the islets. [ID:nL3N0O833R]
    Tensions between China and its neighbours have also risen sharply in the South China Sea in recent weeks, following the deployment of a Chinese oil rig in waters also claimed by Vietnam. The deployment sparked anti-Chinese riots in Vietnam.
   The Philippine foreign ministry this month accused China of reclaiming land on a disputed reef in the South China Sea and said it appeared to be building an airstrip. [ID:nL3N0O0006]
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka and Osamu Tsukimori and Paul Carsten in Beijing; Editing by Ron Popeski)