Japanese Prime Minister 
Junichiro Koizumi's latest visit to the Yasukuni Shrine has seriously affected 
the improvement of China-Japan relations and hurt the international image and 
national interest of Japan. 
 
 
 |  Japanese Prime 
 Minister Junichiro Koizumi pays tribute at Chidorigafuchi national 
 cemetery, Japan's nondenominational tomb of the unknown soldier, in Tokyo 
 August 15, 2006. Koizumi visited the nearby Yasukuni shrine, dedicated to 
 Japan's war dead, early on Tuesday, the anniversary of Tokyo's World War 
 Two surrender. [Reuters]
 | 
Chinese State Councilor 
Tang Jiaxuan made the remarks in Beijing Sunday when meeting with Doi Takako, 
honorary leader of the Social Democratic Party of Japan. 
Koizumi visited the Yasukuni Shrine on August 15, anniversary of Japan's 
surrender in World War II. 
Tang said the deadlock of Sino-Japanese political relations lies in that the 
Japanese leaders insist on visiting the Shrine which honors Japanese "class A" 
war criminals. 
Koizumi's visit severely harms the feeling of the people victimized by 
Japanese militarist aggression and damages the political basis of Sino-Japanese 
relations, he said. 
Koizumi visited the shrine every year since he took office as prime minister 
in 2001. 
Tang said the Chinese side will continue to work for breaking the deadlock of 
Sino-Japanese relations. 
He said he hopes that the Japanese side can follow historical trends and the 
wills of the peoples of the two countries, remove political barriers and push 
Sino-Japanese relations, together with China, back onto a normal development 
track. 
Tang said he highly appreciates Doi for her long-term work on improving 
Sino-Japanese friendship and hopes that she can make more efforts in this 
aspect. 
Doi was former leader of the Social Democratic Party of Japan and also former 
speaker of the House of Representatives from 1993 to 1996. She visited China 
many times and former Chinese President Jiang Zemin and President Hu Jintao had 
met with her. 
Doi said to abide by the three political documents between the two countries 
is the foundation of maintaining a healthy and stable bilateral relationship. 
Correctly understanding history is important both to Japanese-Chinese 
relationship and Japan's development, she said. 
Relations between the two countries have been chilled by Koizumi's visits. 
Soon after Koizumi's sixth visit on August 15, Chinese Foreign Ministry 
issued a statement expressing "strong protests" against the move.
Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing summoned Japanese Ambassador to China Miyamoto 
Yuji and lodged strong objections. 
In Beijing more than 30 Chinese citizens gathered outside the Japanese 
embassy on the morning of Aug. 15 to protest against Koizumi's visit. 
The anger over Koizumi's shrine visit also spread in Nanjing, capital of 
eastern China's Jiangsu Province, where at least 300,000 Chinese were massacred 
by Japanese troops in 1937. 
In Japan, Koizumi's shrine visit also prompted protests from opposition and 
coalition parties, politicians and civil groups, according to media 
reports.