China, Japan continue talks on strained ties (AFP) Updated: 2006-02-11 17:31
Japan and China have entered the second and final day of high-level talks
aimed at easing strained bilateral ties, with the end of Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi's controversial tenure in sight.
China's vice foreign minister Dai Bingguo and his Japanese counterpart
Shotaro Yachi moved on to a hot springs resort north of Tokyo after holding a
morning session of talks in the Japanese capital, officials said.
Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Dai Bingguo
(L) shakes hands with his Japanese counterpart Vice Foreign Minister
Shotaro Yachi before their talks at the Iikura House in Tokyo February 10,
2006. [Reuters] |
The specific agenda for Saturday's talks between the East Asian neighbours
was not immediately made public.
But the two sides were believed to be discussing ways to improve their ties
frayed by Koizumi's repeated visits to a Tokyo shrine which honours Japanese war
dead, including convicted 14 war criminals.
It was the first bilateral meeting at the vice minister level in four months
since the Japanese premier made his annual pilgrimage to Yasukuni Shrine in
October, sparking off protests in China and South Korea.
The Japanese side was reportedly seeking a resumption of contacts between
Koizumi and Chinese President Hu Jintao, as well as their foreign ministers.
But Beijing is strongly opposed to any top-level bilateral exchanges because
Koizumi -- who has promised to step down in September after more than five years
in office -- refuses to stop his shrine visits.
In their talks late Friday, Dai and Yachi "confirmed the importance of
Japan-China relations" and also discussed cultural exchanges among youths from
the two countries, the Japanese foreign ministry said in a brief statement.
The pair were believed to be discussing oil and gas in a disputed area of the
East China Sea.
In a meeting with a Japanese ruling coalition leader on Friday, Dai called
Beijing's opposition to the shrine visits a "matter of principle" and said the
situation should change.
"The efforts to mend soured Sino-Japan ties have begun with Prime Minister
Koizumi on the sidelines amid renewed focus on the leadership election of the
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in September," the major Japanese newspaper
Mainichi Shimbun newspaper commented on Friday.
Because the ruling coalition holds the majority in parliament, the new head
of the LDP, of which Koizumi is the incumbent president, would become the next
premier.
In a sign the LDP hopes to bridge the gap with Beijing, its policy chief
Hidenao Nakagawa plans to visit China from February 19 and former prime minister
Ryutaro Hashimoto will go in late March, media reports said.
Despite the bilateral friction, China is Japan's largest trading partner,
leading much of the Japanese business community to push for an easing of
tensions.
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