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Japan, China to launch history talks next week
TOKYO—Japan said Monday it
will hold its first joint history study with China next week and called
for both sides to be open-minded so they can improve ties strained over
the past.
A 10-member Japanese team will hold its first meeting with its Chinese
counterparts on December 26-27 in Beijing, chief government spokesman
Yasuhisa Shiozaki announced.
The joint history project gained momentum in October when Japan’s new
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe went to Beijing and spoke with Chinese
President Hu Jintao about how to ease friction.
The current gap in historical interpretations between Japan and China
remains too large,” said Shinichi Kitaoka, a Tokyo University professor
who was appointed chairman of the Japanese side.
“Our first interest is to try to narrow it by sorting things out and
pursuing an academic discussion,” he told a news conference.
Ties between the Asian powers have been frayed over Japan’s 1931-1945
wartime occupation, with China harboring deep bitterness over Japanese
atrocities.
Former Japanese prime minister Junichiro Koizumi inflamed tensions with
his annual visits to the Yasukuni shrine in central Tokyo, which honors
2.5 million war dead including 14 top war criminals.
Kitaoka said the two sides would discuss in Beijing what subjects to
study but that he wanted the research to look “widely” at history. “I
don’t think focusing on only the bad aspects of history is a correct way
of understanding history,” he said.
Kitaoka also said the Japanese side did “not want to force a single
interpretation” and had experts in both ancient and contemporary
history.
The two countries have clashed over textbooks, with China upset by
Japanese books that make little mention of atrocities such as the 1937
Nanjing massacre.
China says some 300,000 civilians were killed when Japanese troops
embarked on an orgy of destruction in the eastern Chinese city. Allied
trials of Japanese war criminals documented 140,000 victims. Japan
counters that Chinese textbooks ignore Tokyo’s post-war record as a
major donor to Beijing.
Amid the drive to repair relations, the Japanese and Chinese foreign
ministers agreed last month to set a 2008 target for publication of the
joint study. |