China, Japan seek to ease oil dispute (Reuters) Updated: 2006-01-09 15:12
PUTTING DISPUTES ASIDE
But analysts said that while the unresolved historical issues set the tone
for relations, the gas dispute was the most concrete and immediate problem
facing China and Japan.
The two would meet again at the end of January or early next month for
further talks, likely in Beijing, the spokesman said.
There was no immediate comment from China's foreign ministry on the talks.
The two sides have not agreed on how much to invest or how to split profits
of resources extracted from the areas of the East China Sea near the islands
known in Japan as the Senkakus and in China as the Diaoyus.
China has criticised Japan for starting to award exploration rights to
private companies, and Japan objects to China's starting work in the area,
fearing it could tap into resources beyond what Tokyo recognises as a midway
line in the waters.
Japan has also long demanded China provide data on its gas development
projects in the area.
"They might start actual development of resources and we have concern that
their work will absorb our Japanese resources, so we asked them to share their
information" the spokesman said.
Sasae, who is also Japan's chief negotiator at six-party talks on North
Korea's nuclear programme, met Chinese negotiator Wu Dawei on Sunday, the
Japanese embassy said, in a sign the two could put aside bilateral disputes to
work together on the regional matter.
The two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States last met in
Beijing in November but North Korea said on Monday it saw no point in holding
further negotiations on dismantling its nuclear programme because of U.S.
sanctions against it.
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