China and Japan should strengthen
understanding and rebuild mutual trust to surmount the ongoing
problems plaguing their relations, said the Chinese ambassador to
Japan yesterday. Ambassador Wang Yi's call for renewed efforts at
improve relations came at the opening of the second Beijing-Tokyo
Forum.
Around 90 officials and scholars from China and Japan are
participating in the two-day event which is looking at ways of
defrosting the current icy bilateral relations. Improving
Sino-Japanese relations had become a common aspiration of the
people of both countries, said Wang.
The souring of relations between Beijing and Tokyo owes much to
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's annual visits to the
Yasukuni shrine where convicted World War II war criminals are
honored along with Japanese war dead.
His visits to the shrine, which began shortly after he took office
in 2001, have led to top leaders of neighboring countries halting
visits for the past five years. China insists the shrine visits
have undermined the political basis for bilateral relations and
pose a significant obstacle to improving them.
"Facing up to history honestly and settling the current problems in
a proper way would provide an opportunity and impetus to build a
stable long-term relationship that looks to the future," said
Wang.
He told the forum that if Tokyo decides to remove the political
obstacles which have chilled the relationship Beijing was sure "to
respond with good will."
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe, the favorite to be
Japan's next prime minister, said in a keynote speech that he
personally wanted a strong Sino-Japanese relationship.
"The China-Japan relationship is one of the most important
bilateral relations," said Abe.
He attributed the current difficulty in bilateral ties to
"misunderstandings" that had occurred between the two Asian
giants.
To illustrate the difficulties Abe cited some statistics. In 1980,
according to him, 78 percent of Japanese people had a positive
attitude towards China but this figure had dropped to just 32
percent some 25 years later. In China only 15 percent of the
population now felt positively about Japan.
"For me these are shocking figures," Abe said. "We must build a
China-Japan relationship that will encourage these figures to
increase naturally." He applauded the forum for providing an
opportunity for discussion which was badly needed to make direct
exchanges possible.
Wang said it was necessary for both countries to take their own
roads towards peaceful development. It was also imperative for the
two sides to rebuild trust which, he said, was as important in
state-to-state relations as in person-to-person contact. Wang
expressed the belief that China and Japan would benefit from a
better relationship. "It's a win-win deal," he observed.
The future of Sino-Japanese relations was a matter of great
significance, not just for the two nations, but for Asia and the
world as a whole, Wang said. Better bilateral relationships were
what Asian countries and the international community expected from
China and Japan, he added.
Abe said that as well as official efforts more channels should be
developed to find the solutions to the problems facing bilateral
relations.
He said the Japanese government had
decided to invite 1,200 Chinese high school students to Japan this
year. They would stay with Japanese host families so as to have the
best possible experience of the country. Forty of the students
would remain in Japan studying at high schools for a year. Youth
exchanges of this type were of great importance in promoting a
long-term friendship between the two countries, Abe added.
With the theme of building new relationships throughout Asia the
forum is open to ideas and proposals on the removal of the
obstacles to bilateral relations.
The annual event, jointly organized by China Daily, Peking
University and the Japanese think-tank Genron NPO moved to Tokyo
this year after its first meeting in Beijing in 2005.
Zhu Ling, editor-in-chief of China Daily, said media in
the two countries could work together to help stabilize the
nation's relations.
Objective and fact-based reporting would help the Chinese and
Japanese people get a clear picture of each other which was key to
easing the current political stalemate, said Zhu.
(China Daily August 4, 2006)