CHINA / National

President offers Japan a way to ease tensions
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-03-31 21:04

BEIJING, March 31 (Reuters) - President Hu Jintao offered to ease tensions with Japan when he met a retired Japanese leader on Friday, but said Japan's current prime minister must stop visiting a shrine honouring war criminals.

Hu told former Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto that "developing friendly and cooperative neighbourly relations between China and Japan is in the two countries' fundamental interests", according to a news broadcast on Chinese state television.

But Hu said the current Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's repeated visits to a shrine that honours war dead, including war criminals from the Second World War, now stood in the way of improved ties.

"If Japan's leader makes the clear-cut decision to cease visiting the Yasukuni Shrine that includes Class-A war criminals, I'm willing to improve and develop Chinese-Japanese relations and hold meetings and dialogue with the Japanese leader," Hu said.

His comments came at a time of renewed anger across the region at Tokyo's wartime past and a year after passionate anti-Japan protests rocked China.

Bilateral ties are at their worst in decades, weighed down by disputes mostly springing from Japan's invasion and occupation of parts of China from 1931 to 1945. Japan also colonised the Korean peninsula from 1910 until its World War Two defeat.

Hashimoto is part of a delegation of China-Japan friendship groups hoping to improve relations frayed by disagreements over how to develop energy resources in disputed waters, and Koizumi's visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, which Hu said were to blame for the tense state of relations.

TEXTBOOK CASE

But as Hashimoto arrived, the Japanese government was under fire in Beijing and Seoul over the education ministry's call for school textbooks to be revised to underline Tokyo's claim to islands claimed by both its neighbours.

In China, the vice-director of the Foreign Ministry's Asian Affairs department lodged a strong protest against Japan over the issue and reiterated China's claim to the Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea.
Page: 12