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ไม่ใช่ไม่อ่านหรอก ก็นั่นหลักฐานที่จีนบอกว่าเป็นของจีนมันก็ต้องหาที่มันตีความเข้าข้างจีนซิ Today, Japan takes the position that the islands had been uninhabited and showed no trace of having been under the control of China prior to 1895. Japan also claims the islands were neither part of Taiwan nor part of the Pescadores Islands, which were ceded to Japan by the Qing Dynasty of China in Article II of the May 1895 Treaty of Shimonoseki, thus were not later renounced by Japan under Article II of the San Francisco Peace Treaty. Japan also states that the US, between 1945 and 1972, controlled the islands and after the occupation, Japan exclusively exercised administration over the islands.
Japan also alleges that China and Taiwan only started claiming ownership of the islands in 1971, following a 1969 United Nations report that large oil and gas reserves may exist under the seabed near the islands. Japan further claims that former president of Republic of China, Lee Teng-hui, said that the Senkaku Islands are part of Okinawa.
Japan erected a marker on Kubajima and Uotsurijima to incorporate the islands as part of its territory. This was widely publicized in 1950. Koga Tatsushiro and his family then developed four of the islands with permission from the Japanese government.
Kentaro Serita of Kobe University points out that an official history book called the History Of Ming compiled during the Qing Dynasty, describes Taiwan as a foreign country.
After a number of Chinese were rescued from a shipwreck in 1920, a letter purportedly sent to Japanese fishermen by the Chinese Consul Feng Mien in Nagasaki on behalf of the Republic of China on May 20, 1921, made reference to Senkaku Islands, Yaeyama District, Okinawa Prefecture, the Empire of Japan. The letter is on exhibition at Yaeyama museum.
From 1895 to 1940, there was a Katsuobushi factory that had employed approximately two hundred Japanese residents on the islands.
In 1953, the Peoples Daily, a newspaper that is controlled by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China published an article that stated the Senkaku Islands were part of Japans territory. In November of 1958, a World Atlas published by the Map Publishing Company of Beijing, treated the Senkaku Islands as Japanese territory.
In 1969, The Washington Times claims it obtained a classified map made by the Peoples Republic of China map authority listing the Senkaku Islands as part of Japans territory.
In October of 1965, a World Atlas published by the National Defense Research Academy and the China Geological Research Institute of Taiwan records the Diaoyu Islands with Japanese names: Gyochojima, Taishojima, and Senkaku Gunto. In the late 1970s, the government of the Republic of China tried to recall these books, but the information was already available to interested sources.
In 1970, a state-prescribed Taiwan textbook treated the islands as Japanese territories.
In 1978, a Japanese nationalist group, Nihonseinensha built a lighthouse on Uotsuri Jima, which was subsequently handed over to the Japanese government in 2005.
อยากเห็นเเผนที่อันนี้จัง In 1969, The Washington Times claims it obtained a classified map made by the Peoples Republic of China map authority listing the Senkaku Islands as part of Japans territory.
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