|
Japanese students arrive in China for year of youth exchange
BEIJING—A total of 1,000
Japanese youth arrived in China on Monday for a seven-day tour of the
country to mark the start of the China-Japan Friendly Exchange Year of
the Youth.
The Japanese delegation, breaking into small groups, will respectively
visit such cities as Shanghai and Hangzhou in the east, Chongqing and
Chengdu in the west, Guangzhou in the south and Dalian in the northeast
and hold get-togethers with their Chinese peers. They will gather in
Beijing on Saturday to participate in the China-Japan Friendly Exchange
Year opening ceremony. The delegation, led by Japanese Vice Minister for
Foreign Affairs Osamu Uno, consists of 500 high school students, 200
university students and 300 young representatives from all walks of
life.
Yotaro Kobayashi, the chief Japanese member of the new 21st Century
Committee for China-Japan Friendship, is the delegation’s special
advisor. The China-Japan Friendly Exchange Year was created last year by
China Premier Wen Jiabao and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda when
the two met over lunch in Singapore at the Asian Summit in November. It
also marks the 30th anniversary of the signing of the Japan-China Peace
and Friendship Treaty. A series of youth exchange activities will be
conducted over the course of the year in the fields of culture,
academia, environmental protection, science and technology, media,
tourism, film and television.
The China-Japan Friendly Exchange Year is sponsored by the All-China
Youth Federation and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan. Chinese
youth will visit Japan later in the year. Visiting Chinese State
Councilor Tang Jiaxuan said on Thursday that the Sino-Japanese
friendship has reached an unprecedented high level and is set to thrive
in the new century.—Xinhua |