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BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhuanet) -- Chinese State Councilor
Tang Jiaxuan has said that China has taken and will continue to take various
measures to protect the security of Japanese diplomatic missions, enterprises
and citizens in China in accordance with the law.
Tang has made the remarks when meeting Toyohiko
Yamanouchi, president of Japan's Kyodo News Agency on Tuesday, according to a
press release from the Chinese Foreign Ministry on Friday.
China-Japan relations have recently turned tense due
to historical and territorial issues. Last week the Chinese public were
infuriated by the approval of a controversial new version of history textbook by
the Japanese government.
Thousands of Chinese, including college students,
took to the streets in Beijing and several cities in south China last weekend to
voice their anger over the new textbook.
"The Chinese government has attached great importance
to the situation and has kept on urging the public to express their appeals in a
calm, sane, law-abiding and orderly manner and to avoid extreme activities,"
Tang was quoted as saying.
Tang, China's former foreign minister, told
Yamanouchi that China had made great efforts in preventing the issue from
escalating. "A large number of police personnel have been deployed to secure the
safety of Japanese agencies and citizens in China."
The state councilor said the Chinese government
"didn't approveof" and "didn't want to see" the extreme activities which
occurred sporadically during the process of public protests.
However, he pointed out that such incidents had
reflected that China-Japan relations were faced with a "grave and complex
situation" which deserved "sufficient attention from both sides".
"If we judge things out of context, the problems will
only become more complicated, which will not benefit the long-term development
of China-Japan relations," said Tang, calling on both sides to "find out the
deep-rooted reasons" for such incidents in order to appropriately resolve the
issue.
Tang said it was regrettable that some people in
Japan alleged the extreme activities were supported by the Chinese government
and had resulted from the so-called "anti-Japanese education" by the Chinese
government.
"I have to point out here that such allegations are
totally groundless and a serious distortion of truth," he said. "It is quite
normal for any country in the world to carry out patriotic education on it
people, but China's patriotic education is by no means an anti-Japanese
education."
"China has never tried to instill such sentiments as
repulsion or hatred toward Japan into its general public," said Tang. "We only
ask our people not to forget historical lessons so as to avoid the recurrence of
historical tragedies, and we have always emphasized that peoples of both
countries should look forward into the future and be friends forever."
Tang said China had never viewed the broad masses of
the Japanese people as the same as a few militarists who started the war of
aggression against China 60 years ago, and had never held the opinion that the
people in Japan today should be blamed for their country's history of invasion.
"This point was made clear a long time ago by the
first generation of Chinese leaders," said Tang, citing the remarks of late
Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai, who said upon the normalization of Sino-Japanese
ties in 1972 that both the Chinese and Japanese peoples were victims of the
aggressive war launched by the Japanese militarists.
"For many years, China has been educating its people
in this way, trying our best to make a correct guidance of the general public,"
he added.
The state councilor went on to say that the recent
demonstrations by some people in China were actually triggered by the Japanese
government's adoption of the new right-wing history textbooks, which "tampered
with history and beautified aggression",and were aimed at preventing Japan from
becoming a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council.
Comparing Japan with Germany, Tang said that while
Germany had promulgated laws to prohibit any reversal of the historical verdicts
on Nazi fascism, Japan had allowed the publication of right-wing history
textbooks to whitewash its history of invasion.
"In as early as the 1970s, former German Chancellor
Willy Brandt got down on his knees before the Holocaust monument in Warsaw to
show his country's repentance. But the Japanese prime minister is still visiting
the Yasukuni Shrine (where 14 Class A war criminals of World War II are honored)
every year. How sharp the contrast is!" said Tang.
"The Chinese people really can't understand how a
nation which cannot honestly look at its aggressive history and which cannot
correctly understand the feelings of the people of the countries it victimized
could be qualified to bid for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council," he
said.
"This is not only the feeling of the Chinese people,
but also acommon feeling shared by the people of Japan's other neighboring
countries," said Tang.
Tang said that Japan, which once showed an attitude
of remorse and apology toward its aggression past and once expressed
understanding of and respect for the feelings of the victims of war, now "tends
to overemphasize the factor of internal politics while turning a blind eye to
the feelings of its neighbors".
"Nowadays the Japanese government only stresses that
the visit to the Yasukuni Shrine by its prime minister is a matter of national
and cultural tradition, and that it has no power to intervene in the history
textbook issue. It also pays no attentionto the sentiments of the people in the
neighboring countries, regarding them as so-called external interference," he
noted.
"With such foreign policy, how could Japan win trust
and support from its neighbors and from the international community?" asked
Tang. Enditem |