China / Government

Xi and delegates signal 'thaw'

By Zhao Shengnan (China Daily) Updated: 2015-05-25 07:26

President says ties with Japan in hands of the two peoples

Xi and delegates signal 'thaw'

President Xi Jinping gives a speech during the China-Japan friendship exchange meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, May 23, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]

At a huge hall full of music, applause and an unusually large Japanese delegation, President Xi Jinping has struck a friendly tone on China-Japan ties, while also warning against any attempt to distort Japan's wartime history.

The visit of the 3,000-member delegation and Xi's appearance at their gathering on Saturday in Beijing marked the latest sign of thawing relations between China and Japan, said observers.

Toshihiro Nikai, head of the delegation and a heavyweight figure from Japan's ruling party, also attended an event to promote northeast Asian tourism in Dalian, Liaoning province, on Sunday.

"China-Japan friendship is rooted in the people, and the future of the bilateral relationship is in the hands of the people of the two countries," Xi said at a meeting at the Great Hall of the People aimed at boosting exchanges.

China attaches great importance to developing the relationship, and it "has not changed this basic policy and will not change it in the future", Xi said.

The delegation, including heads of local governments and enterprises, marks the largest mission between the two countries since Tokyo's illegal purchase of China's Diaoyu Islands in September 2012.

High-level meetings and tourism have picked up recently. But ties have not fully recovered due to lingering rows about territory and history.

This year marks the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, and the war's victims, including China, will never accept Japanese statements or actions that distort history, said Xi.

His remarks came just a day after China renewed its call for Japan to "face up to" its 20th-century history after Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's wife visited the controversial Yasukuni shrine.

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