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Instead, Jia Qinglin, a senior Communist Party official, met with members of the China-Japan Friendship Association Thursday, striking a friendly note by welcoming the Japanese elder statesmen as "old friends of the Chinese people." He said they had worked hard to promote exchanges and cooperation in economic, political and cultural areas. Yohei Kono, a former Japanese foreign minister, referred to the strife when told his Chinese hosts he had come to Beijing "this time with a heavy heart." The islands, held by Japan, are tiny and uninhabited but sit astride rich fishing waters and potentially large reserves of natural gas. They are also claimed by Taiwan. Japan's purchase of some of the islands from their private Japanese owners two weeks ago sparked sometimes violent protests in China that targeted Japanese-owned stores and factories. Noda defended the purchase as an attempt to ensure their "stable management," but conceded, "It seems that China has yet to understand that."
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