HomeEconomySemiconductors: for Beijing, Japanese restrictions will push China to "become autonomous"

Semiconductors: for Beijing, Japanese restrictions will push China to “become autonomous”

Japan recently announced restrictions on the export of semiconductor manufacturing equipment.

Tokyo’s announced restrictions on the export of semiconductor manufacturing equipment will only “further stimulate” China to “become self-sufficient,” Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang told his Japanese counterpart at his meeting on Sunday. visit to China. “The blockade will only further spur China’s determination to achieve self-reliance,” Qin Gang said, calling Japan a “lackey” of Washington, according to a report from the ministerial meeting.

In statements to journalists, the head of Japanese diplomacy, Yoshimasa Hayashi, for his part, defended the restrictions, considering them “in accordance with international standards” and assuring that “they were not directed at a particular country.” This visit by Yoshimasa Hayashi is the first to China by a Japanese foreign minister since December 2019. It comes after more than three years of badly deteriorated bilateral relations.

The meeting of the two ministers in Beijing on Sunday came just two days after Japan announced plans to restrict the export of semiconductor manufacturing equipment. With this announcement on Friday, similar to previous decisions by the United States and the Netherlands, Tokyo immediately drew the ire of China, which it addressed without being directly named.

“Ancient Tricks Against China”

These export restrictions are aimed at “preventing the diversion of technology for military purposes,” Japanese Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura explained on Friday, adding that no country in particular was targeted. “The United States used intimidation tactics to brutally suppress the Japanese semiconductor industry, and now it is up to its old tricks against China,” the Chinese foreign minister told his Japanese counterpart, according to the minutes of the meeting.

Semiconductors have become a major sticking point in the difficult relations between China and Japan, the world’s second and third largest economies respectively. The two ministers also mentioned the case of a Japanese detained in China. Suspected of espionage, he worked in China for the Japanese pharmaceutical group Astellas. Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters after the meeting that Japan had “protested” against this detention and called for the “immediate release” of this Japanese citizen.

China will handle this file “in accordance with the law,” Qin Gang said.

Author: J.Br. with AFP
Source: BFM TV

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