'Time to bring ties back on track' By Le Tian (China Daily) Updated: 2006-07-05 05:55
There has been no fully-fledged summit since 2001 because of the shrine
visits.
Responding to Hu, Ozawa said: "A good-neighbourly relationship between China
and Japan is in the interests of both countries and is also conducive to peace
and stability in Asia and even the world at large."
He went on to say his party values relations based on the mutual benefit of
the two countries.
On Sunday, Ozawa called for the names of war criminals to be taken off the
list of the dead at the Yasukuni Shrine.
Ozawa, who left Japan's dominant Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in 1993 and
helped create a short-lived anti-LDP coalition government, became DPJ chief in
April after years in the party's backroom. His visit to China is his first
journey outside Japan as party leader.
His visit came as Vice-Foreign Minister Wu Dawei yesterday urged Koizumi not
to visit the Yasukuni Shrine on August 15, the anniversary of the end of World
War II.
"Not visiting the shrine would be a fitting end (to Koizumi's term)," Wu was
quoted as saying in a meeting with visiting Japanese lawmaker Hajime Funada in
Beijing. Koizumi plans to step down in September.
But Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe said Japan will not let its
leaders' visits to the shrine "be used as a bargaining chip" in deciding whether
to hold summits with China.
Other issues have also affected relations, including a dispute on gas
exploration on the East China Sea.
Speaking at a regular news briefing yesterday Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Jiang Yu said the sixth round of talks on the gas exploration issue will begin
in Beijing on July 8. The previous five rounds were held between October 2004
and May this year.
|