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Japanese FM vows to strengthen ties with China
MUNICH—Japanese Foreign
Minister Masahiko Komura said Sunday that Japan is committed to further
enhancing its relations with China.
A strategic Sino-Japanese partnership based on mutual respect is in the
interests of both countries and will contribute to regional stability,
Komura told a group of high-profile diplomats at a key security
conference in the southern German city of Munich. Japan should seize the
opportunity of a state visit to Japan by Chinese President Hu Jintao in
spring to push bilateral relations to a higher level, Komura said.
“China is a key player not only in Asia but in the international
community,” he said, noting that many global issues, including climate
change and the fight against terrorism, can not be effectively addressed
without China’s involvement. Komura welcomed China’s constructive role
in solving the nuclear issue of the Korean peninsula within the
framework of six-party talks.
The minister also warned that any unilateral attempts to change the
status quo across the Taiwan strait could spell tensions in the region.
Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda, who visited China in December, has
described 2008 as “a very rare opportunity” for the development of
Sino-Japanese relations. The year 2008 marks the 30th anniversary of a
Sino-Japanese friendship and peace treaty, which was signed by Fukuda’s
father, former Japanese Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda, and the late
Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping in 1978.
The three-day annual security meeting, which kicked off on Friday, is
scheduled to address a range of the world’s most thorny issues. Some 300
high-profile diplomats, including NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop
Scheffer, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates and the European Union’s
foreign policy chief Javier Solana, attended this year’s meeting.
China has forwarded disaster-relief materials provided by Japan and the
United States to the country’s hard-hit eastern and southern regions for
distribution, the Ministry of Civil Affairs said here on Saturday.
Wang Zhenyao, director of the ministry’s disaster relief bureau, said
the supplies from Japan, worth 57 million yen (about 524,000 U.S.
dollars), had been transferred to eastern Anhui Province. The U.S. aid,
worth about 820,000 U.S. dollars, would be distributed in Guizhou
Province and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in southwest China.
Japan’s aid included 300 power generators, 300 coils of wire, 3,000
blankets and 2,100 sleeping cushions.—Xinhua
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