
Japan says China's military activities could 'seriously impact' its security
The defence ministry said in its white paper that China was ramping up its activities in the entire region surrounding Japan.
A Chinese military aircraft entered Japan's airspace in August last year, it said. Then, in September, a Chinese aircraft carrier and two other naval ships sailed between two Japanese islands near Taiwan.
Beijing's military "created a situation that could seriously impact Japan's security", the paper said.
It repeated its comment from last year's paper that China's military ambitions pose "an unprecedented and (the) greatest strategic challenge" to Japan and the world.
Beijing responded by saying the paper "hypes up the so-called China threat".
"China expresses strong dissatisfaction and firm opposition to this and has lodged solemn representations with Japan," China's foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said.
Tokyo said last week that Chinese fighter jets flew within 30m of a Japanese military patrol aircraft over the East China Sea.
Last year, Chinese vessels sailed near the Japanese-administered Senkaku islands - known as the Diaoyu in China - a record 355 times, according to Tokyo.
And last month, Japan said that two Chinese aircraft carriers sailed in the Pacific simultaneously for the first time, including in Japan's economic waters.
China called it "routine training".
Beijing has also conducted joint drills with Russia which are "clearly intended as a demonstration of force against Japan", the paper said.
It repeated that North Korea's activities pose a "more grave and imminent threat to Japan's national security than ever before".
The white paper was approved by the cabinet of Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Tuesday.
JAPAN BOOSTS DEFENCE SPENDING
Japan is in a multi-year process of increasing its defence spending.
It is bolstering its military ties with Washington - and other regional United States allies - to make US and Japanese forces nimbler in response to threats such as a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.
The Pentagon is pressing Japan and Australia to make clear what role they would play if the US and China went to war over Taiwan, the Financial Times reported on Saturday.
Elbridge Colby, US under-secretary of defence for policy, has been pushing the issue in meetings with Japanese and Australian defence officials in recent months, the FT said.
Colby said that President Donald Trump's "common sense agenda" included "urging allies to step up their defence spending and other efforts related to our collective defence".
"Of course, some among our allies might not welcome frank conversations," Colby wrote on X.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
8 hours ago
- CNA
Japan says China's military activity a 'grave concern' in annual defence white paper
Japan has released its annual defence white paper, calling China's military activity a "grave concern". It highlighted the increasing presence of the Chinese military around Japan in the past year — such as near the disputed Senkaku Islands, which China also claims and calls Diaoyu. The white paper also raised alarm bells over the speed of North Korea's missile development. Japan's defence budget is expected to rise to 1.8% of its GDP this fiscal year. Michiyo Ishida reports.


CNA
8 hours ago
- CNA
Hong Kong opens probe into AI-generated porn scandal at university
HONG KONG: Hong Kong's privacy watchdog said on Tuesday (Jul 15) it has launched a criminal investigation into an AI-generated porn scandal at the city's oldest university, after a student was accused of creating lewd images of his female classmates and teachers. Three people alleged over the weekend that a University of Hong Kong (HKU) law student fabricated pornographic images of at least 20 women using artificial intelligence, in what is the first high-profile case of its kind in the Chinese financial hub. The university sparked outrage over a perceived lenient punishment after it said on Saturday it had only sent a warning letter to the student and demanded that he apologise. But Hong Kong's Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data said on Tuesday that disclosing someone else's personal data without consent, and with an intent to cause harm, could be an offence. The watchdog "has begun a criminal investigation into the incident and has no further comment at this stage", it said, without mentioning the student. The accusers said in a statement on Saturday that Hong Kong law only criminalises the distribution of "intimate images", including those created with AI, but not the generation of them. There is no allegation so far that the student spread the deepfake images, and so "victims are unable to seek punishment ... through Hong Kong's criminal justice system", they wrote. The accusers said a friend discovered the images on the student's laptop. Experts warn the alleged use of AI in the scandal may be the tip of a "very large iceberg" surrounding non-consensual imagery. "The HKU case shows clearly that anyone could be a perpetrator, no space is 100 per cent safe," Annie Chan, a former associate professor at Hong Kong's Lingnan University, told AFP. Women's rights advocates said Hong Kong was "lagging behind" in terms of legal protections. "Some people who seek our help feel wronged, because they never took those photos," said Doris Chong, executive director at the Association Concerning Sexual Violence Against Women, referring to cases at the group's crisis centre. "The AI generations are so life-like that their circulation would be very upsetting." Asked about the case at a Tuesday press briefing, Hong Kong leader John Lee said most of the city's laws "are applicable to activities on the internet".


CNA
8 hours ago
- CNA
Australia and China emphasise need for dialogue as Albanese meets Xi
Australia and China are looking to keep lines of communication open and expand cooperation, as both countries navigate recent bilateral trade and geopolitical tensions. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese emphasised the need for dialogue during his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing. Mr Xi Ji echoed that tone, calling for common ground, while putting differences aside. He also hailed a "turn around" in ties with Australia. Mr Albanese is at the halfway point of his six-day trip, which began in Shanghai. Deborah Wong reports from Shenzhen.