The Senkaku/Diaoyu islands have been a source of tension between China and Japan for decades
China
has demarcated an "air-defence identification zone" over an area of the
East China Sea, covering islands that are also claimed by Japan.
China's Defence Ministry said aircraft entering the zone must obey its rules or face "emergency defensive measures".
The islands, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, are a source of rising tension between the countries.
Japan lodged a strong protest over what it said was an "escalation".
"Setting
up such airspace unilaterally escalates the situations surrounding
Senkaku islands and has danger of leading to an unexpected situation,"
Japan's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
Taiwan,
which also claims the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands, expressed regret at the
move and promised that the military would take measure to protect
national security.
'No specific target'
In
its statement, the Chinese Defence Ministry said aircraft must report a
flight plan, "maintain two-way radio communications", and "respond in a
timely and accurate manner" to identification inquiries.
"China's
armed forces will adopt defensive emergency measures to respond to
aircraft that do not co-operate in the identification or refuse to
follow the instructions," said the statement.
It said the zone came into effect from 10:00 local time (02:00GMT) on Saturday.
State
news agency Xinhua showed a map on its website covering a wide area of
the East China Sea, including regions very close to South Korea and
Japan.
Responding
to questions about the zone on an official state website, a defence
ministry spokesman, Yang Yujun, said China set up the area "with the aim
of safeguarding state sovereignty, territorial land and air security,
and maintaining flight order".
"It
is not directed against any specific country or target," he said,
adding that China "has always respected the freedom of over-flight in
accordance with international law".
"Normal
flights by international airliners in the East China Sea Air Defence
Identification Zone will not be affected in any way."
The islands have been a source of tension between China and Japan for decades.
In
2012, the Japanese government bought three of the islands from their
Japanese owner, sparking mass protests in Chinese cities.
Since then, Chinese ships have repeatedly sailed in and out of what Japan says are its territorial waters.
In
September this year, Japan said it would shoot down unmanned aircraft
in Japanese airspace after an unmanned Chinese drone flew close to the
disputed islands.
China said that any attempt by Japan to shoot down Chinese aircraft would constitute "an act of war".
Last
month Japan's defence minister, Itsunori Onodera, said China's
behaviour over the disputed East China Sea islands was jeopardising
peace.
BBC
World Service East Asia editor Charles Scanlon says the confrontation
over the small chain of uninhabited islands is made more intractable by
conflicting claims for potentially rich energy resources on the sea bed.
But
the issue has now become a nationalist touchstone in both countries,
making it hard for either side to be seen to back down, he says.

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