The government has voiced serious concerns after Japanese police shot dead a 
Chinese man. 
Reports in the Japanese media said officers on patrol in Tochigi Prefecture, 
Japan, noticed two Chinese men behaving suspiciously on Friday afternoon. 
Stopped by the police, the pair allegedly attempted to grab the officers' 
guns, but the police shot one man in the stomach. 
He died shortly after arriving at hospital. The other man was arrested. 
Sources with the Chinese Foreign Ministry said the government was closely 
monitoring the case. 
On Saturday officials with the Consular Affairs Department of the Foreign 
Ministry lodged representations with the Japanese Embassy in China, and the 
Chinese Embassy to Japan has contacted the Japanese Foreign Ministry, noting the 
government's serious concern. 
Chinese officials have called for an immediate inquiry by Japanese 
authorities, keeping Chinese officials informed, to ascertain the truth and 
properly resolve the issue. 
The Chinese Embassy to Japan is also closely following events, and has 
dispatched consular officials to Tochigi Prefecture to investigate and to visit 
the arrested Chinese man. 
Aso's China visit possible in Aug. 
Japan and China are arranging to have Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso 
visit China possibly in late August, but the plan could be called off if Prime 
Minister Junichiro Koizumi were to visit the war-related Yasukuni Shrine in 
Tokyo on Aug. 15, diplomatic sources said Sunday. 
The envisioned plan would have Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing formally 
invite Aso during their anticipated bilateral talks on the sidelines of a 
regional ministerial conference in Malaysia in late July, and Aso would accept, 
the sources said. 
If the trip were to be realized, it would be the first visit by a Japanese 
foreign minister to China since April 2005. 
Last October, China refused to receive a planned visit by then Japanese 
Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura after Koizumi paid homage at Yasukuni. 
The ongoing arrangement for Aso's visit is believed to reflect Beijing's 
intention to try to pave the way for mending ties with Tokyo after Koizumi steps 
down in September. Aso has expressed intention to run in the ruling Liberal 
Democratic Party's presidential election to choose Koizumi's successor. 
Aso's possible trip to China is being timed for late August at the earliest 
so that China will be able to observe Koizumi's action, given that the prime 
minister has not yet been able to realize his pledge to visit the shrine on the 
Aug. 15 anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II, the sources said. 
Koizumi, who made the pledge while campaigning for the LDP presidential 
election in April 2001, has visited the shrine once a year since winning the 
race and thus taking the premiership, but not yet on Aug. 15. His latest visit 
took place last October. 
While Aso has shown willingness to visit China as part of efforts to improve 
bilateral ties, Beijing is said to be demanding that the foreign minister 
clearly indicate beforehand that he himself does not intend to visit Yasukuni. 
Aso and Li, who last met bilaterally in Doha, Qatar, on May 23 on the 
sidelines of another regional meeting, are expected to meet next in Kuala 
Lumpur, where ASEAN-related ministerial meetings are scheduled in late July. 
In Doha, where the first bilateral foreign ministerial contact in about a 
year was made, Aso said he believes that a visit to Yasukuni is "something I 
should make a decision on while considering both my feelings as well as my 
public role." 
He told reporters after meeting with Li that he "felt the meeting has become 
an opportunity for creating the trend toward an improvement in bilateral ties." 
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told a press conference in 
Beijing on May 25 that Aso is an important individual with whom to cooperate 
together. 
Koizumi's visits to the Shinto shrine, considered a symbol of past Japanese 
militarism, have sparked criticism from countries such as China and South Korea 
which suffered Japanese aggression before and during World War II. 
Japan asked to put relations 'back on track' 
As China and Japan commemorated the repatriation of more than 1 million 
Japanese emigrants from China after World War II, the nation again urged Japan 
to put bilateral relations back on track. 
"We hope the Japanese Government takes a responsible attitude towards 
Sino-Japanese ties and gets bilateral relations back on the path of sound 
development," said State Councillor Tang Jiaxuan at a forum on China-Japan 
relations, part of the commemorations marking the 60th anniversary of the 
repatriation. 
On May 7, 1946, nine months after Japan surrendered to the Allies, about 
2,500 Japanese, victims of their country's colonial expansion, began their 
voyage home from Huludao, marking the beginning of a repatriation effort that 
lasted into 1948. 
Limited by shortages of natural resources, Japan turned to a national policy 
of emigration and colonization in the early part of last century. This movement 
saw a surge after 1931 when the Japanese army occupied the northeast part of 
China. 
By the end of World War II, there were more than 2 million Japanese emigrants 
in China, most of whom were farmers in the northeast, according to researchers. 
Tang said Sino-Japanese relations are one of the most important bilateral 
relations in Asia and even the world. 
"We can't change history. But we should be responsible for the future, be 
responsible for the welfare of our children," Tang said. 
Vice-Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, Liaoning Governor Zhang Wenyue and Tomiichi 
Murayama, former Prime Minister of Japan, took part in the forum. 
"The repatriation demonstrated the generosity and humanitarianism of the 
Chinese people, and many Japanese are deeply grateful for it," said Murayama. 
Murayama also expressed his worries about current Sino-Japanese relations and 
said he hopes the Japanese Government could treat its relations with China and 
other neighbouring countries seriously. 
He was backed by Muraoda Kyuhei, chairman of the Japan-China Friendship 
Association. 
Kyuhei said the major obstacle in China-Japan relations was the Japanese 
leaders' insistence on visiting the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo.
(China Daily 06/26/2006 page1)