Japan told to face up to history
18/4/2005 10:32
Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing told visiting Japanese Foreign Minister
Machimura Nobutaka yesterday that China hopes Japan to take "concrete actions"
to face up with and self-examine its history of invasion. In line with the
spirit of "taking history as a mirror and looking forward to the future" and the
three key political documents on bilateral ties, China hopes the two countries
can co-exist peacefully, maintain friendship for generations to come, conduct
cooperation on a mutually beneficial basis and seek common development, Li
said. "That will serve the long-term interests of the two countries as well
as world peace, stability and development," said the Chinese foreign
minister. Li said a correct view of history is a precondition for improving
China-Japan ties. China hopes that the Japanese side will take concrete
actions to honor its pledge of facing up with and self-examining its history of
invasion, and stop doing things that would harm the feeling of the Chinese
people so as to thoroughly tackle relevant problems, Li said. Nobutaka said
the Japanese government will adhere to the spirit of "taking history as a mirror
and looking forward to the future" and develop Japan-China friendship from the
viewpoint of the overall situation of bilateral ties. Nobutaka said Japan's
invasion into China in modern history brought great damage to the Chinese
people. The Japanese side feels deep regret for that and once again expresses
"deep remorse and apology," he said. The Japanese side will draw profound
lessons from history and will continue to adopt a path of peaceful development,
he said. On the Taiwan issue, Li told Nobutaka that the Taiwan issue is a
problem concerning on "the core interest" of China's and relates to the feeling
of 1.3 billion Chinese people. The adherence to the one-China principle lays the
political foundation of the China-Japan relationship, he stressed. The
Chinese side strongly requests Japan to honor its promise and not do anything
detrimental to China's sovereignty, Li said. The Japanese foreign minister
reiterated that Japan adheres to the one-China policy, and renders no support to
"two Chinas," "one China, one Taiwan" or "Taiwan independence." Both Li and
Nobutaka agreed that Sino-Japanese relations are important to both and the two
sides should handle the relationship from long-term and strategic
perspectives. The two sides agreed to make joint efforts to safeguard world
peace and stability, not pose any threat to the other and resolve disputes
through dialogue. Li solemnly demanded the Japanese government take effective
measures for guaranteeing the safety of Chinese institutions and citizens in
Japan. In Tokyo, the Chinese Embassy in Japan has lodged a protest to the
Japanese government, after the embassy and the consulate had been harassed over
the past week. The residence of the Chinese ambassador to Japan was molested
late Friday, with its doorplate, mailbox and interphone sprayed with red
paint. On Friday afternoon, the Chinese Embassy received an anonymous envelop
with white powder inside. Japanese police said the white powder turned out to be
starch and it was a hoax, but they were investigating the incident. On
Wednesday, an envelope containing a razor blade was sent to the Chinese
Embassy. On Monday, the Chinese Consulate in Osaka received a letter of
intimidation, with shells of pistol bullets in the envelope.
Xinhua news
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