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| Japanese Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura (L) meets with State Councillor Tang Jiaxuan in Beijing April 18, 2005. [Reuters] | BEIJING, April 18 (Xinhuanet) -- China has the sincerity for improving relations with Japan, and hopes Japan could show the same sincerity to help create favorable conditions for the improvement of bilateral ties, State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan said here on
Monday.
"As long as the two sides can properly handle
historical and Taiwan issues, the political foundation of the Sino-Japanese
relationship would be consolidated, the bilateral ties would be furthered, and
the cause of Sino-Japanese friendship would be improved in a comprehensive way,"
said Tang during a meeting with visiting Japanese Foreign Minister Machimura
Nobutaka.
Welcoming the Japanese foreign minister to visit
China at "a difficult time for China-Japan relations", Tang pointed out that the
Japanese side had "repeatedly failed the trust of the Chinese people" and had
been "driving on a reverse gear" on issues like history and Taiwan in recent
years.
"This has done damage to the friendly relations
between China and Japan, as well as to the friendly sentiments between the two
peoples, which are the hard-won results of painstaking efforts by the older
generations of political leaders of both countries," lamented Tang.
"Such a result is not in the interest of China,
neither of Japan," said Tang, who urged Japan to "seriously review" what it had
done and to take concrete measures to correct its doings.
Tang said China and Japan were close neighbors and
both were countries of significant influence in the world. "Therefore the two
peoples should be friends for one generation after another, which conforms not
only to the fundamental interest of both countries, but also to the need of
peace and prosperity of the Asia-Pacific region and the rest of the world."
"This should be a fundamental stand for the two
governments andpeople from all circles in both countries to adhere to while
examining and handling bilateral ties," Tang added.
The Chinese state councilor went on to say that the
Chinese government was committed to stabilizing, improving and developing
relations with Japan, based on the three political documents accepted by both
countries and in the spirit of "learning from history and facing up to the
future".
Nobutaka said during the meeting that he had come to
visit withthe hope to help improve Japan-China relations, and that Japan was
clearly aware of China's strong concerns over issues like history and Taiwan.
There was no change of Japan's attitude of remorse on
the history issue as expressed by former Prime Minister Murayama Tomiichi in
1995, and no change of its stance on the Taiwan issue as clearly written in the
three political documents between the two countries, said the minister.
"Japan does not support 'Taiwan's independence'," he
said.
The minister said that Japan hoped to cooperate with
China in awide range of areas, including the hosting of the Olympic Games, and
would make utmost efforts to push forward the relationship between the two
countries. Enditem |