Mainland China In March 2005, demonstrations were organized in several cities in the
People's Republic of China (PRC), including
Chongqing,
Guangzhou,
Shenzhen,
Zhengzhou,
Shenyang,
Ningbo,
Harbin,
Chengdu,
Luoyang,
Qingdao,
Changsha,
Hefei,
Beijing,
Wuhan,
Fuzhou,
Hangzhou and
Shanghai. In some cases, demonstrators attacked and damaged Japanese
embassies,
consulates,
supermarkets,
restaurants (mostly
franchise businesses owned by Chinese) as well as people, prompting the Japanese government to demand an apology and compensation for damages. The official PRC attitude towards the demonstrations is considered by foreign observers as enigmatic. On the one hand, the government allowed the demonstrations to occur in the first place. While the PRC policed the protests, some observers believe that measures to rein in the violence and property damage were deliberately ineffective. However, the PRC has only indirectly reported the current protests in state-owned
media, withholding coverage from a national audience. State-owned media in the PRC nevertheless carried extensive coverage of anti-Japanese demonstrations in
South Korea, as well as distant but related events, such as the European commemoration of the liberation of the
Buchenwald concentration camp.
Internet censorship has been extended to subjects related to the protests. Many universities prohibited students from coming onto or leaving the campus.
Mass transit systems in close proximity to protest rally points were shut down. However, this policy was contradicted in several cities, including Beijing, where city buses were used by the municipal authorities to ferry students into the protests. Students at
Tsinghua and
Peking Universities also reported receiving phone calls from university authorities encouraging them to demonstrate. In the second half of April 2005, the ''
People's Daily'' published several articles to calm down the protesters, and the Ministry of Public Security declared that "unauthorized marches were illegal". PRC police tactics are perceived to be similar to those utilized when demonstrations were held outside the American embassy in Beijing after
NATO forces
bombed the PRC embassy in
Belgrade,
Yugoslavia in May 1999. The slogan "patriotism is not a sin" () is popular, albeit in a sarcastic sense, among the PRC protesters. Political observers on the
U.S. National Public Radio have argued that the controversy is being allowed by the
Chinese Communist Party partly in order to further a multitude of political goals. American news outlets
CNN and
Time Magazine have also pointed out that historical inaccuracies are not limited to Japanese textbooks, but that Chinese government-made textbooks are equally rife with omissions and non-neutral point of view. Cases of questioned text include the
Great Leap Forward, China's 1979 invasion of Vietnam, the
Cultural Revolution ("lots of appalling events happened") and the
1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre, in which hundreds or thousands of protesters were killed.
Tibet is a subject given scant mention except by foreign press, and
Xinjiang remains detached from the ongoing controversy.
Japanese response to Chinese protests In
Japan, no large-scale anti-PRC rallies or demonstrations took place, although a small number of protesters demonstrated outside PRC consulates, and in one case a spent cartridge case was mailed to Chinese officials. Nevertheless, more and more people canceled their travel plans to
China, and some doubt was raised about the
2008 Summer Olympics, scheduled to be held in
Beijing. The Japanese foreign minister visited Beijing to meet his counterpart on April 17. The
Xinhua News Agency reported that in the meeting held in Beijing between PRC and Japanese foreign ministers, the Japanese minister offered an apology for Japan's wrongdoings during
World War II. However, Xinhua omitted in its report that in this meeting the Japanese negotiators demanded an apology and compensation for damage against Japanese property and people. That demand was rejected by
Li Zhaoxing, the Chinese foreign minister. Meanwhile, the Japanese foreign ministry officially denied the news reports from the state-controlled
Xinhua News Agency, which reports little about the ongoing patriotic demonstrations in major Chinese cities. The
Tokyo Stock Exchange recorded a sharp plunge on Monday, April 18, and correlations between the demonstrations and Sino-Japanese economic ties are raised in the financial industry. Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi expressed his "deep remorse and heartfelt apology" for the suffering that Japan caused other Asian nations during World War II at the
Asia-Africa Conference in
Jakarta,
Indonesia on April 22. However, 81 Diet members visited
Yasukuni Shrine hours before, causing more
controversy inside and outside Japan about the true attitude of
Tokyo on this subject. Koizumi met with
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Hu Jintao on April 23.
Taiwan Although in the past, the
government of the Republic of China on
Taiwan has been severely critical of the content of Japanese history textbooks, in the wave of 2005 revisions of the textbooks, Taiwan has, for the most part, been much quieter than the PRC. This is indicative of the relatively high level of tension in the relationship between the PRC and the ROC and the comparatively good relations between Taiwan and Japan. Earlier in 2005, Japan and the
United States had issued a joint declaration calling for a "peaceful solution" to the
Taiwan issue, a declaration that angered the PRC, which protested that this declaration constituted interference in "internal affairs".
Hong Kong In late April 2005, peaceful marches and rallies concerning Japanese war crimes during the
occupation of Hong Kong took place. The
Government of Hong Kong also issued a statement of protest against the official approval of the 2005 Japanese history textbooks.
North Korea In 2005,
North Korea condemned the official approval of the revision of Japanese textbooks. One official was quoted as calling the textbooks "
philistinism peculiar to Japan, a vulgar and shameless political dwarf".
South Korea South Korea vigorously protested the official approval of the 2005 Japanese history textbooks. South Korean Minister of Trade Kim Hyun-Chong canceled a planned visit to an Asian trade summit in Japan. On May 6, 2005, in a meeting between then-President
Roh Moo-hyun and
Liberal Democratic Party's Secretary General
Tsutomu Takebe, President Roh demanded Japan takes step to properly educate its citizens. He told Takemura that the teaching of history should not be treated as the academic matter and freely discussed but as the political matter and with the responsibility falling on the government to control it.
Philippines Similar to
Taiwan,
the Philippines has been much quieter than other Asian countries invaded by the Japanese during World War II, even though many atrocities were committed by the invading Japanese during the war, such as the systematic rape of Filipino women whom the Japanese referred to as
comfort women. An estimated one million Filipinos were killed during the war, out of a wartime population of 17 million, and many more were injured. Nearly every Filipino family was hurt by the war on some level. Despite this, "Filipinos are not as offended as the Chinese or the Koreans are, for example, about the fact that these atrocities are given only fleeting attention in Japanese classrooms, if at all...". The soothing of Filipino anger towards Japanese imperialism is helped by close ties with the Japanese people and cooperation of Japan government with the Philippines government for infrastructure building and rural development. However, many Filipinos still do harbor anger toward the Japanese government. For example, there are the anti Japanese-U.S. military alliance protests and the comfort women issues. ==Specific issues==