Tokyo has lodged a protest with Moscow after it scrambled
four fighter jets to intercept a foreign aircraft -- believed to be
Russian -- which briefly violated its airspace, government officials
said Wednesday.
The foreign ministry made the protest shortly after
the plane entered Japanese airspace off the coast of the northernmost
main island of Hokkaido, near a disputed island chain, on Tuesday
afternoon.
"We made the protest through the Russian embassy in Tokyo," a foreign ministry official told AFP.
"The Russian side did not confirm the case, only saying they will check facts."
The Japanese Air Self-Defense Force scrambled four jets to head off the intruder, which it believed was Russian after analysing its course, a defence ministry official said.
If confirmed, this would be the first time Russian planes have entered Japanese airspace since August 2013, when two Tu-95 Russian strategic bombers were intercepted off the southwestern Okinoshima Island, the ministry said.
Sixteen seconds after entering Japanese airspace, the plane left towards the Kuril island chain, claimed by Tokyo but controlled by Russia, the ministry added.
Soviet troops seized the islands, known as the Northern territory in Japan, just after Japan surrendered in World War II.
The seven-decade-old dispute has hampered trade and prevented Moscow and Tokyo from signing a formal post-war peace treaty.
A map on the defence ministry's website showed the plane crossed a halfway line between Japan's Nemuro peninsula and one of the four disputed islands, called Kunashir in Russia and Kunashiri in Japan.
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida is considering visiting Moscow next week to discuss a possible visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin to Tokyo later this year, the daily Sankei Shimbun newspaper reported.
"We made the protest through the Russian embassy in Tokyo," a foreign ministry official told AFP.
"The Russian side did not confirm the case, only saying they will check facts."
The Japanese Air Self-Defense Force scrambled four jets to head off the intruder, which it believed was Russian after analysing its course, a defence ministry official said.
If confirmed, this would be the first time Russian planes have entered Japanese airspace since August 2013, when two Tu-95 Russian strategic bombers were intercepted off the southwestern Okinoshima Island, the ministry said.
Sixteen seconds after entering Japanese airspace, the plane left towards the Kuril island chain, claimed by Tokyo but controlled by Russia, the ministry added.
Soviet troops seized the islands, known as the Northern territory in Japan, just after Japan surrendered in World War II.
The seven-decade-old dispute has hampered trade and prevented Moscow and Tokyo from signing a formal post-war peace treaty.
A map on the defence ministry's website showed the plane crossed a halfway line between Japan's Nemuro peninsula and one of the four disputed islands, called Kunashir in Russia and Kunashiri in Japan.
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida is considering visiting Moscow next week to discuss a possible visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin to Tokyo later this year, the daily Sankei Shimbun newspaper reported.
Kishida's
planned visit to Moscow was rescheduled in August after Tokyo hit out
at Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev's trip to one of the disputed
islands.
Japan scrambles jets
hundreds of times a year to defend its airspace, both against Russia
and these days also against Chinese aircraft.
Tokyo
scrambled fighters 464 times in the year through March against Chinese
aircraft -- a record -- after they breached its air defence
identification zones, a wider aerial circle than airspace.
It also sent out 473 aircraft against Russia over the same period.
Beijing
has warned this is heightening tensions between the two Asian
powerhouses, which are already at loggerheads over a long-standing
territorial conflict in the East China Sea and Japanese military
aggression in the first half of the 20th Century.
No comments:
Post a Comment