Presidents of dozens of colleges and universities in China and
Japan attending a two-day forum in Shaanxi's provincial capital are
not letting their countries' frosty diplomatic relations stand in
the way of finding new ways to further academic study.
"Chinese and Japanese universities face similar challenges and
issues and the co-operation between the two academic communities
will help the growth of advanced education in the Asian region",
Vice Minister of Education Zhang Xinsheng said when addressing the
Fourth China-Japan University President Forum.
The presidents of 16 Chinese and 15 Japanese colleges and
universities are attending the forum.
He noted that it is the historical duty of both Chinese and
Japanese universities to help reshape a harmonious Sino-Japanese
relationship and boost the common prosperity of the two countries
and the Asian region.
Echoing Zhang's view, Japanese Vice Minister of Education Kondo
Shinji also told the forum that Japanese and Chinese colleges and
universities are both at a crucial phase of reform in the
knowledge-driven 21st century.
Japan's political ties with China have chilled markedly over the
past year due to a number of disputes, some of which are linked to
education.
Japan's approval of a junior high school history textbook in
2005, which played down the 1937 Nanjing Massacre and ignored the
sexual enslavement of women for Japanese soldiers, has contributed
to the chill.
The most serious issue remains Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi's repeated pilgrimages visits to the Yasukuni Shrine
honoring Japan's World War II war criminals.
The heads of the two neighbouring nations have halted exchange
of visits for over four years, ever since Koizumi began paying
homage to the controversial war shrine soon after he took office in
2001.
Nevertheless, the Chinese government has repeatedly said the
relations between China and Japan were achieved through "long-term
and arduous efforts" of many people and therefore "deserve to be
cherished."
Statistics from Japan show that there are about 120,000 overseas
students studying in Japan and more than 80,000 are from China.
In a bid to attract more Chinese overseas students to study in
Japan, Japan's education ministry is now planning to increase its
budget for overseas Chinese students studying at expensive private
universities, according to a source with the ministry.
Officials from the 15 Chinese and Japanese universities held
one-on-one consultations and signed or renewed their exchange and
cooperation agreements.
The annual forum was initiated by Peking University and Japan's
University of Tokyo in 2000. The Chinese and Japanese education
ministries have taken part in the forum since 2003.
(China Daily May 12, 2006)