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Japanese youth start China tour for year of youth exchange
SHANGHAI—A 1,000-member
Japanese youth delegation hAS started their tour of China with different
groups visiting Shanghai and Hangzhou in the east, Chongqing and Chengdu
in the west, Guangzhou in the south and Dalian in the north
respectively.
Led by Japanese Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs Osamu Uno, the
delegation consisted of 500 high school students, 200 university
students and 300 young representatives from all walks of life.
In Shanghai, a group of more than 90 Japanese college students visited
THE East China Normal University (ECNU) to take in a museum and learn
about Chinese history. The students were surprised to find so many
shared common interests with their Chinese peers.
“Visiting here changed my outlook. I found Chinese students are quite
open-minded and very easy to communicate with,” said Ito Eriko of the
Kyoto Women’s University.
“I’m here not only to witness the rapid development of the country, I
also want to make more Chinese friends and establish channels to
exchange views with them on many common issues”, said Aoyama Yasushi of
the University of Tokyo.
“We have so much in common and so many differences between our two
countries,” the senior said, adding he would now keep an eye on news
about China to discuss with his new Chinese friends.
In Chongqing, the young Japanese visited an exhibition hall on the War
of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, which includes records on the
air raids of Chongqing. Several visitors expressed the wish of “no more
wars” in English.
In Chengdu, a delegation visited a farmhouse, while in Guangzhou,
another group watched the operation of a wastewater treatment center
with great interest.
The delegation members will convene in Beijing on Saturday to
participate in the China-Japan Friendly Exchange Year opening ceremony.
The China-Japan Friendly Exchange Year was created last year by Chinese
Premier Wen Jiabao and Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda when the two
met over lunch in Singapore at the Asian Summit in November. This year
also marked 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.
Chinese youth will visit Japan later in the year.—Xinhuat a
contract without specific time limits will help employees feel more
attached to their companies and do no harm to employers.
—Xinhua |