Senior party officials from China and Japan called their first
regular dialogue "frank" and "insightful" as they concluded a
one-and-half-day meeting in Beijing on Wednesday morning.
Wang Jiarui, head of the International Department of the Chinese
Communist Party Central Committee (IDCPC), said that both sides
showed sincerity and motivation in carrying out the dialogue in an
"extensive and practical" way.
Hidenao Nakagawa, Japan's Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) No.
3, said exchanges between the ruling parties of Japan and China are
an important communications channel. He said that he sincerely
hopes for their dialogues to continue despite their
differences.
Nakagawa, chairman of the party Policy Research Council, heads
the eight-member Japanese delegation. Also in the Japanese
delegation is Yoshihisa Inoue, Policy Research Council chairman of
the Komei Party, the other half of Japan's ruling coalition.
The Chinese side was headed by Wang Jiarui and consisted of some
20 prominent figures.
The two sides fully expressed their views on the current state
and problems of China-Japan relations, the prospects for bilateral
relations, trade and economic cooperation, and foreign and defense
policies.
The biggest grouse is the issue of Japanese leaders' repeated
visits to the Yasukuni Shrine that honors 14 convicted World War II
criminals.
Wang said China-Japan relations are now "at a critical crossroad
facing the historic challenge of what course to follow."
The current state of China-Japan relations is abnormal and
unharmonious, Wang said.
He noted that the CPC and the Chinese government have a clear
guideline, sincere motivation and earnest attitude toward the
development of good-neighborly, friendly and cooperative
relationship with Japan. However, the Chinese side has yet to
receive any positive response from the Japanese side, Wang
said.
During the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of China's
victory in the war against Japanese aggression last September,
Chinese President Hu Jintao
said the nation's emphasis on the need to always remember the past
does "not mean to continue the hatred."
Hu also called on the Japanese government and its leaders to
translate their apologies and remorse for the war into concrete
action.
However, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi paid yet
another visit to the Yasukuni Shrine last October. He said later
that he would continue to visit the controversial war shrine.
Koizumi even went on to say that the visits are an internal affair
and that other countries have no right to intervene.
Wang said that under the current circumstances, the key to
breaking the deadlock and improving bilateral relations is in
Koizumi's hands, that is, he should stop visiting the shrine.
Nakagawa said that he has heard the opinions of the Chinese and
will convey the same to the Japanese people, the Japanese
government and its leaders.
The two countries should particularly step up economic
cooperation, Wang said. "So we can protect prospering economic ties
from the effects of the political chill, which have already seen
slower growth in 2005.
"Moreover, the two countries should also enhance exchanges in
culture, sports and youth programs to promote mutual understanding
and trust," Wang said.
The two-day meeting (February 21 to 22) is the first between the
CPC and the Japanese ruling coalition since they established an
exchange mechanism in March 2004.
Japan has proposed holding the second meeting in Japan early
next year.
(Xinhua News Agency February 23, 2006)