Saturday, October 18, 2014

Yasukuni Shrine: New visits to shrine obstacle to relations

Beijing expressed to Tokyo its "serious concerns and firm opposition" on Friday after more than 100 Japanese lawmakers made a pilgrimage to the shrine that honors Class-A war criminals from World War II.....

Observers said the trip to Yasukuni Shrine will "backfire" as it came while the Japanese Cabinet is trying to kick-start Sino-Japanese relations with a planned meeting of the two countries' leaders at the upcoming APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting next month in Beijing.


On Friday morning, media noted that while Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe did not visit the shrine, he offered a ritual offering - a "masakaki" tree.

Abe's donation was followed by worship from a multiparty group of 110 national lawmakers.

Frequent visits by prominent Japanese figures to the Yasukuni Shrine have long clouded Japan's relationship with its Asian neighbors - especially China and South Korea - in past decades. Sino-Japanese ties sank to a new low in December after Abe himself made a pilgrimage to the shrine.

China is greatly concerned about "the negative developments within Japan" regarding the Yasukuni Shrine, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters on Friday.

The relationship will not achieve a healthy and stable development unless "Japan substantially faces up to and expresses sincere remorse for its aggressive past and draws the line with militarism", the spokesman said.

Beijing called upon Tokyo to properly handle such issues in a responsible manner and honor its statements and commitments on these historical issues.

A spokesperson of the Chinese delegation to the Asia-Europe Meeting in Milan, Italy, said on Friday that Premier Li Keqiang did not hold any meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Abe "came to shake hands with Premier Li" during a banquet held on Thursday, the spokesperson said.

Yang Bojiang, deputy director of the Institute of Japanese Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said Tokyo's recent diplomatic overtures "may end up being total hypocrisy" if the Japanese Cabinet refuses to change its revisionist-history approach.

Abe's repeated calls for an official meeting with Chinese leaders "may have been made because of pressure from within and outside of Japan", while the Japanese prime minister has failed to provide any tangible action that correspond to his promises, Yang said.

Zhou Yongsheng, a professor of Japanese studies at China Foreign Affairs University, warned that "Japan has not expressed sufficient remorse" for its aggression and expansionism during World War II, and some Japanese figures even believe that Japan waged the war to "free Asian people from the colonists of the West".

South Korea also criticized Abe's move, saying Japanese political leaders "should clearly remember they are negating the premise and the international order under which Japan returned to international society after the war when they show respect and gratitude to the shrine, which honors Class-A war criminals as gods".

Japanese upper house lawmaker Kazuyuki Hamada told a Friday international symposium in Tianjin that "Northeast Asian countries will never establish a real win-win situation among them if the historical issues are not successfully resolved and mutual trust not finally built".

China Daily - china.org.cn
18/10/14
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2 comments:

  1. The leaders of Japan and China are likely to meet for the first time next month on the sidelines of a regional summit in Beijing, shaking hands in a carefully negotiated display of good will that Japanese officials say they hope will lower tensions between the two estranged Asian powers...

    The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the negotiations, said the hoped-for meeting between Japan's prime minister, Shinzo Abe, and his Chinese counterpart, President Xi Jinping, had been months in the making and involved behind-the-scenes diplomatic efforts by both nations.

    While they have not received final word from the Chinese side, they said they were now optimistic that the two leaders would meet briefly — perhaps for about 15 minutes — during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting, or APEC, a summit of regional leaders that Xi will host.............http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/china/Leaders-of-China-and-Japan-may-meet-for-first-time/articleshow/44866677.cms
    18/10/14

    ReplyDelete
  2. Abe Cabinet says deal with China preventing Yasukuni visit ‘does not exist’ ...

    Japan has decided to hold firm on its stance that it has no agreement with China preventing the prime minister and two other senior leaders from visiting the war-linked Yasukuni Shrine.

    In a move that could further damage Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s chances of holding formal talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, the Cabinet on Tuesday finalized a written response denying a 2005 claim by then-Chinese Ambassador to Japan Wang Yi that Japan agreed not to have its prime minister, foreign minister and chief Cabinet secretary visit the shrine.

    Wang, now China’s foreign minister, said in April 2005 that the two nations had concluded a “gentlemen’s agreement” after Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone paid an official visit to Yasukuni in 1985.

    “Such an agreement does not exist,” Abe’s administration said in response to a written inquiry filed by Upper House member Kazuyuki Hamada, an independent.

    Abe’s December 2013 Yasukuni visit not only angered China and South Korea but also stoked disappointment in the United States, which had hoped Japan would work to improve frosty ties with its neighbors for the sake of security in the Asia-Pacific region....................http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2014/11/04/national/politics-diplomacy/abe-cabinet-says-deal-with-china-preventing-yasukuni-visit-does-not-exist/#.VFiIOVefI_8
    4/11/14

    ReplyDelete

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