Beijing -- Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will pay 
an official visit to China from October 8 to 9, Chinese Foreign Ministry 
spokesman Liu Jianchao announced on Wednesday.
 
 
 |  Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (R) is escorted by guards 
 as he arrives at the Upper House plenary session at the parliament in 
 Tokyo October 4, 2006. The Chinese Foreign Ministry announced Wednesday 
 that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will pay an official visit to 
 China from October 8 to 9. 
[Reuters]
 | 
 
"China and Japan reached a consensus on overcoming the political obstacle to 
the bilateral relationship and promoting the sound development of bilateral 
friendly and cooperative relationship," Liu said. 
"Accordingly, at the invitation of Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, Japanese Prime 
Minister Shinzo Abe will pay an official visit to China from October 8 to 9," 
the spokesman said. 
The Sino-Japanese relations have been soured by former Japanese Prime 
Minister Junichiro Koizumi's repeated visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, where 
Japan's war dead, including 14 class-A war criminals in WWII, are honored. 
The leaders of the two countries halted exchange of visits since Koizumi paid 
a homage to the war shrine in 2001. 
Chinese President Hu Jintao said last March in a meeting with the heads of 
seven Japan-China friendship organizations that the difficult situation in 
China-Japan relationship was not caused by the Chinese side or the Japanese 
people. 
The sticking point is that the major obstacle in China-Japan relationship was 
Japanese leader's insistence on visiting the shrine, Hu said. 
China always values its relationship with Japan, considering it one of the 
important bilateral relations in the world, he said. The Chinese side has made 
unswerving efforts to improve China-Japan relations. 
The president said the China's stance on its relationship with Japan is 
"clear", "consistent" and "unswerving." 
China will, as it always does, handle China-Japan relationship from a 
strategic and long-term point of view and is committed to China-Japan peaceful 
coexistence, long-term friendship, mutually beneficial cooperation and common 
development, he said. 
The Chinese side will abide by the principles set in the three Sino-Japanese 
political documents, continue to "take history as a mirror and look into the 
future," and properly settle the problems between the two sides through equal 
consultations, and maintain China-Japan friendship, said Hu. 
Abe won a landslide victory in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's 
presidential election on September 20, and was elected new Prime Minister on 
September 26. 
He has pledged to improve relations with Japan's Asian neighbors, but refused 
to say whether or not he would visit the shrine as prime minister. 
Abe said Monday that on the view of Japan's wartime history, he will follow 
the 1995 statement made by the then Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama who 
apologized and expressed remorse for Japan's colonial rule and atrocities before 
and during the war. 
Abe also said that Japan had accepted the results of the International 
Military Tribunal of the Far East that convicted 14 Japanese wartime leaders as 
war criminals.