Chinese
premier seeks friendship with Japan
By
Hiroshi Hiyama
AFP
TOKYO
Petroleumworld.com
04 12 07
Visiting Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao Thursday extended
an offer of friendship to Japan, striking a conciliatory tone on wartime history
-- an issue that has dogged relations for years.
Wen, making the first address to the Japanese parliament by a Chinese leader
in more than two decades as part of his fence-mending visit, urged the Asian
powers to resolve their disputes peacefully.
"The Chinese public must foster friendship with Japanese people," he
said, the flags of the two countries waving behind the podium.
Wen, the first Chinese premier to visit Tokyo in seven years, laid the blame
for Japan's invasion and 1931-1945 occupation of China -- still a bitter memory
for many Chinese -- on the shoulders of a "limited number" of wartime
leaders.
He also acknowledged the Japanese people had suffered as well.
"As the Chinese leaders of the past generations have said, the responsibility
for the war of aggression should rest with a limited number of militarists," Wen
said.
"The general Japanese public were also victims of the war."
China and Japan have become increasingly economically interlinked, with Japan
counting on its giant neighbour as a vital source both for workers and for middle-class
consumers.
But relations between Asia's two largest economies were badly strained during
the 2001-2006 tenure of Japanese premier Junichiro Koizumi, who repeatedly visited
a war shrine Beijing and Seoul associate with imperialism.
Just days after taking over from Koizumi, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe -- who made
his career as a hardliner on emotive history issues -- went to Beijing in October.
Wen, who met Abe Wednesday for a dinner of sushi and Japanese beef, told Japanese
lawmakers Thursday that while their prime minister's visit to Beijing had broken
the ice, he aimed to "melt" the ice with his trip to Tokyo.
The Chinese premier did his best to take his message of friendship to the public,
taking an early morning jog before his address to parliament.
Sporting black sportswear bearing logos for next year's Beijing Olympics, the
64-year-old Wen jogged around a Tokyo park, chatted with members of the public
and showed off a few tai chi moves.
"What do you do for a living?" Wen asked one woman through a translator,
as a group of security guards and Chinese ambassador to Tokyo Wang Yi looked
on.
"I am a barber," she replied in Japanese.
"I am Wen Jiabao," he replied.
"I saw you on TV," she said.
In his address to the Japanese parliament, Wen made no reference to any specific
disputes on history such as the Yasukuni war shrine in Tokyo or Abe's recent
controversial remarks on World War II sex slaves.
Instead, he said he understood Japan's global aspirations.
"We understand Japan's desire to play a yet greater role," Wen said.
China, the only Asian nation with veto power on the UN Security Council, in 2005
scuttled Japan's cherished bid for a permanent seat on the prestigious body,
saying Tokyo had not atoned for its past atrocities.
Wen stopped short of supporting the Security Council bid, saying, "China
is prepared to improve our bilateral understanding by strengthening dialogue."
He also called for dialogue to solve one of the most intractable disputes dividing
the two countries -- a feud over vast gas fields in the East China Sea.
"We will try to make the sea a sea of peace, cooperation and friendship," Wen
said.
AFP 120236 GMT 04 07
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