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South Korea protests Japanese event over disputed islands

South Korea protests Japanese event over disputed islands

ReutersSun, February 22, 2026 at 6:06 AM UTC

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1 / 0FILE PHOTO: A set of remote islands called Dokdo in Korean and Takeshima in JapaneseFILE PHOTO: A set of remote islands called Dokdo in Korean and Takeshima in Japanese is seen in this picture taken from a helicopter carrying South Korean President Lee Myung-bak (not pictured), east of Seoul August 10, 2012. REUTERS/The Blue House/Handout/ File Photo

SEOUL, Feb 22 (Reuters) - South Korea on Sunday protested a Japanese government event commemorating a cluster of disputed islands between ‌the two countries, calling the move an unjust assertion of ‌sovereignty over its territory.

In a statement, the foreign ministry said it strongly objected to the ​Takeshima Day event held by Japan's Shimane prefecture and to the attendance of a senior Japanese government official, urging Japan to immediately abolish the ceremony.

The tiny islets, known as Takeshima in Japan and Dokdo in South ‌Korea, which controls them, have ⁠long been a source of tension between the two neighbours, whose relations remain strained by disputes rooted in ⁠Japan's colonial rule of the Korean peninsula from 1910 to 1945.

"Dokdo is clearly South Korea's sovereign territory historically, geographically and under international law," the ministry ​said, ​calling on Japan to drop what ​it described as groundless claims ‌and to face history with humility.

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The ministry summoned a top Japanese diplomat to the ministry building in Seoul to lodge a protest.

A person at Japan's foreign ministry said no one was available on Sunday to comment. A call to the Prime Minister's Office went unanswered. The government ‌sent a vice-minister from the Cabinet Office, ​not a cabinet minister, to the ceremony.

Seoul ​has repeatedly objected to Japan's ​territorial claims over the islands, including a protest issued ‌on Friday over comments by ​Japan's foreign minister during ​a parliamentary address asserting Tokyo’s sovereignty over the islets.

The territory lies in fertile fishing grounds and may sit above enormous deposits ​of natural gas hydrate ‌that could be worth billions of dollars, Seoul has said.

(Reporting ​by Kyu-seok Shim in Seoul; Additional reporting by Kaori Kaneko ​in Tokyo; Editing by William Mallard)

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