Strained relations over the Yasukuni Shrine issue between China
and Japan have eased, although tensions do remain, China's
Ambassador to Japan Wang Yi said in a report published by the
Xinhua News Agency yesterday.
After lengthy consultations, China and Japan "have finally
agreed to overcome this political impediment damaging bilateral
relations," Wang said of the Yasukuni Shrine issue.
The shrine in Tokyo honors 14 Class-A war criminals of World War
II, among many other war dead, and is considered by China and some
other Asian nations as honoring Japan's past militarism.
"Many of the conflicts and friction in Sino-Japanese relations
in recent years have surfaced over the Yasukuni Shrine issue, but
the broader background is that the national strength of both
countries has risen to different degrees," the ambassador said. He
suggested that some Japanese were troubled by China's rise.
"A senior Japanese official told me that China's development and
rise is a fact we must face up to. But just as the United States in
the 1980s could not adjust to Japan's rise, now many in Japan are
not mentally prepared to accept China's development," Wang said.
"Truly smoothing China-Japan relations needs time and constant
efforts from both sides."
Wang highlighted the importance of China-Japan relations, saying
"be it in history, reality or geopolitics, Japan has a unique and
important position in China's diplomacy."
He said Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's visit to Beijing in
October "broke the political stalemate in bilateral relations and
offered a window of hope for future China-Japan relations."
A month later, Abe met with President Hu Jintao
on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in
Hanoi, Vietnam.
Both top-level meetings had significantly improved bilateral
ties and were widely regarded in Japan as a positive turn in the
bilateral relationship, the Japanese Consul in Hong Kong, Shigekazu
Sato was quoted by the South China Morning Post as
saying.
Japanese sentiment towards China has slightly improved, helped
partly by Abe's visit to China, the first in five years, while
deplorably that towards South Korea has continued to worsen, a
survey conducted by the Japan's Cabinet Office has shown.
According to the government poll published last Saturday, 34.3
percent of Japanese feel good about China, up 1.9 percentage points
from a year earlier, and 21.7 percent said the bilateral ties are
in good condition, up 2.0 points. Both figures marked year-on-year
decreases in 2004 and 2005.
Wang said the sound momentum of improving relations between the
two countries could be maintained by consolidating the political
basis in bilateral relations, that is, properly handle such
sensitive issues as the wartime history and Taiwan.
It is reported the two countries are mulling a high-level visit
by President Hu and Premier Wen
Jiabao to Japan.
(China Daily December 13, 2006)