More Japanese plants, stores close in China amid rising anger
More Japanese plants, stores close in China amid rising anger
September 18, 2012 -- Updated 0435 GMT (1235 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- More Japanese factories and businesses in China shuttered Tuesday over island dispute
- Fitch: credit ratings of Japanese firms could come under pressure if dispute escalates
- Nearly 200 7-11 stores, owned by a Japanese company, were closed in Beijing and Chengdu
- Nissan, Mazda, Honda and Toyota temporarily closed some plants after violent protests
The credit ratings of
Japanese auto and technology manufacturers could come under pressure "if
the clash between China and Japan over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands
escalates and is prolonged," Fitch Ratings Agency warned in a note on
Tuesday.
"A number of Japanese
companies, including Panasonic, have temporarily suspended production at
some of their Chinese facilities as anti-Japanese demonstrations
demanding a boycott of their products flared across 85 cities in China
at the weekend."
Nissan, Mazda, Honda and
Toyota suspended operations at some of their Chinese automotive plants,
as have electronics makers Canon and Panasonic.
Anti-Japanese protests erupt in China
Anti-Japanese protests erupt in China
Tensions rise between Japan and China
Nearly 200 7-11 stores in
Beijing and Chengdu, owned by Japanese company Seven & I Holdings,
as well as 13 Ito Yokado supermarkets will be closed through Wednesday
"to maintain the safety of employees," company spokesperson Katsuhiko
Shimizu said.
Fears are high that
demonstrations Tuesday -- the anniversary of Japan's 1931 invasion of
China -- may repeat scenes of violence which saw a Panasonic factory lit
on fire, Japanese restaurants and department stores ransacked and
Japanese cars smashed and overturned. Meanwhile, a Japanese Coast Guard
official told CNN Tuesday that a Chinese fisheries patrol boat has
entered the disputed waters and a Japanese vessel will attempt to warn
the ship away.
Tensions in the dispute, a
perennial source of nationalistic anger on both sides of the East China
Sea, rose on September 10 after Japanese government agreed to buy the
uninhabited islands from its private Japanese owners. China claims
historical ownership of the island chain, while Tokyo maintains it has
been in Japanese hands since 1895. The islands — known as the Senkakus
in Japan and Diaoyu in China -- were administered by the U.S. occupation
force after World War II. But in 1972, Washington returned them to
Japan as part of its withdrawal from Okinawa.
The islands sit among
popular fishing waters and are also believed to be rich in oil
resources. Ownership of the chain would allow exclusive commercial
rights in the seas surrounding the islands.
China's fishing
moratorium in the East China Sea ended on Sunday, raising concern that
as more Chinese trawlers enter the area, so raises the likelihood of
conflict. China's Ministry of Agriculture issued a statement saying the
"surrounding waters of Diaoyu Island and its affiliated islets are
traditional fishing grounds for generations of Chinese fishermen,"
Beijing's CNTV reported Monday.
Last Friday, China's
state-run agency reported that six Chinese maritime surveillance ships
entered the island chain and began patrols and "law enforcement,"
China's state-run news agency Xinhua reported.
Sales of Japanese car
brands in China were down 2% compared to a year ago, China Association
of Automobile Manufacturers said last week. Meanwhile, sales of foreign
brands from Germany, the U.S., South Korea and France were up 25%, 19%,
12% and 4% respectively.
CNN's Junko Ogura in Tokyo contributed to this story
end quote from:
No comments:
Post a Comment