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TOKYO, June 20 (Xinhuanet) -- The Land, Infrastructure and Transport Ministry of
Japan announced Monday that it had set up an address plate on the so-called
"Okinotori Island" in the Pacific last Friday.
The titanium plate measuring 1 by 1.5 meters was established onthe "island"
with the address of "No.1, Okinotori Island, Ogasawara Village, Tokyo," the
Kyodo News Service reported on Monday.
The plate, which stands on the concrete embankment on the northern part of Okinotori,
also indicates the rock's latitude and longitude and says it is "an
island in the southernmost end of Japan" and is "managed by the Land,
Infrastructure and Transport Ministry," said Kyodo.
The ministry said on Monday that it was "necessary to indicate who is
responsible for the management of the Island because the international community
is concerned about it."
The ministry also publicized photos of Okinotori, an uninhabited reef 1,700
km south of Tokyo, on Monday.
Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara visited Okinotori on May 20 and claimed
that the reef was an "island."
According to Article 121 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea, an island is a naturally formed area of land surrounded by water, which is
above water at high tides. Rocks which cannot sustain human habitation or
economic life of their own shall have no exclusive economic zones or continental
shelves.
On Okinotori, there is no human life and it doesn't meet the conditions for
economic operations. During high tides, merely two mattress-sized reefs are
above the surface.
The Chinese government has stressed several times that China and Japan have
different views over the nature of the Okinotori waters and the two sides should
properly handle the problems arising therefrom through friendly negotiations.
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