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Japanese PM vows to fight terrorism with Iraq policy
unchanged
TOKYO, Nov. 30 (Xinhuanet) -- Japan's Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi vowed on Sunday that Japan will not give in to terrorism after
two Japanese diplomats were ambushed and killed in northern Iraq late Saturday.
"Our policy remains the same: we will not give in to
terrorism," Koizumi was quoted by Kyodo News as saying at a meeting with his
senior aides.
Koizumi indicated his government will continue to
pursue its reconstruction policy on Iraq, saying Japan has the responsibility to
help the Iraqis rebuild their war-torn country.
Foreign Ministry officials, citing reports from Iraq,
said the attack on the Japanese diplomats occurred near Tikrit, about 150
kilometers north of Baghdad, around 11 p.m. Japan time (1400 GMT) on Saturday.
The two Japanese diplomats killed were identified as
Masamori Inoue, 30, a third secretary from the Japanese Embassy in Baghdad,and
Katsuhiko Oku, 45, a counselor from the Japanese Embassy in London.
It is the first time that Japanese have been killed
in Iraq since the start of the US -led war in Iraq.
The two Japanese were riding in a black four-wheel
drive vehicle that bears a Lebanese registration number. The driver of the car,
a Middle Eastern man, was seriously injured.
According to the Foreign Ministry, the Japanese
Embassy in Baghdad was notified of the attack by the Coalition Provisional
Authority (CPA).
The Foreign ministry has set up an emergency task
force headed by Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi to handle the case. And
Kazunori Tanaka, parliamentary secretary for foreign affairs, willbe sent to
Iraq, possibly later Sunday, the Foreign Ministry said.
While there is little information about the
assailants, the al-Qaida terrorist network has warned that Japanese nationals
would be targets of attack if Japan sends troops to Iraq.
The Japanese government has indicated that it plans
to send about 550 ground troops to southern Iraq early next year to take part in
the US-led reconstruction work.
Recent attacks on the United Sates-led occupation
forces and the latest episode involving the two Japanese nationals are troubling
news to Japan, which is preparing to send its Self-Defense Forces troops to Iraq
to assist in Iraq's reconstruction efforts.
Tikrit is the ancestral hometown of deposed Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein and located in the violence-torn Sunni Triangle where
anti-American sentiment remains strong.
Meanwhile, seven Spanish intelligence agents were killed and aneighth was injured Saturday evening in an ambush south of Baghdad,Kyodo News said. Enditem
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