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The anniversary was the top news on China Central Television's noon broadcast, but the boat incident wasn't mentioned. As recently as 2005, some anti-Japan protests have swelled with thousands of demonstrators, threatening to spill public anger into other issues closer to home. "We believe the Chinese people will express their demands in a rational way," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said Saturday in a statement faxed to The Associated Press. Authorities in recent days sought to forestall protests. The website of the China Federation for Defending Diaoyutai remained offline Saturday, and messages about organizing protests were largely scrubbed from Internet bulletin boards. Still, the state-run Chongqing Evening News reported Saturday that hundreds of residents in the southwestern city "spontaneously" gathered to mark the anniversary and sing anti-Japanese songs. The newspaper also reported about 1,000 soldiers, students and others in the northeast city of Changchun gathered in front of a monument marking the "Mukden Incident," vowing to remember history. Beijing has stated that the arrest of the fishing captain could damage relations and has summoned Japan's ambassador, Uichiro Niwa, five times. The Japanese government made no public comment Saturday on the protests, the boat incident or the anniversary.
[Associated
Press;
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