Travel alert about Japan secures safety of Chinese

China’s Foreign Ministry has formally issued a comprehensive travel advisory urging Chinese citizens to avoid non-essential travel to Japan, citing both imminent seismic hazards and ongoing diplomatic strains. The advisory, released jointly by China’s embassy and consulates in Japan, specifically warns Chinese nationals to exercise heightened caution regarding earthquake preparedness and secondary disasters.

The travel alert recommends that Chinese citizens in Japan strictly adhere to local evacuation protocols, implement robust personal safety measures, and avoid coastal regions and other high-risk zones. Foreign Ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun emphasized that the advisory stems from legitimate concerns about citizen welfare following recent seismic events across Japan that have resulted in casualties and widespread tsunami warnings.

Japanese media outlets had speculated that the travel warning represented a diplomatic response to provocative remarks made by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi regarding Taiwan. Guo Jiakun dismissed these allegations, stating that the advisory reflects purely humanitarian considerations rather than political retaliation. “Safeguarding the safety of Chinese citizens overseas constitutes both a fundamental duty of China’s diplomacy and a natural component of its people-centered foreign policy,” Guo stated during a regular press briefing in Beijing.

The diplomatic friction extends beyond travel advisories, as Tokyo recently expressed concerns about joint strategic aerial patrols conducted by Chinese and Russian military aircraft near Japanese airspace. Guo characterized these operations as routine annual exercises that demonstrate regional commitment to security cooperation and stability maintenance. “There exists no necessity for Japan to exaggerate these activities or presume itself specifically targeted,” he remarked.

Regarding Prime Minister Takaichi’s repeated offers for bilateral dialogue, Guo referenced critical commentary from Atsushi Okamoto, former CEO of Japanese publishing house Iwanami Shoten, who questioned the sincerity of these overtures. Okamoto suggested that genuine dialogue requires mutual respect and equal footing—conditions allegedly absent from Takaichi’s approach. Academic expert Wang Peng of Huazhong University of Science and Technology further noted that the Takaichi administration has significantly damaged bilateral relations by inappropriately linking Taiwan matters to Japan’s security agenda.