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| Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (C-L) and his Pakistani counterpart Shaukat Aziz (C-R) witness an agreement signing ceremony in Islamabad. (AFP) |
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| Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and his Pakistani counterpart Shaukat Aziz address a joint press conference in Islamabad. (AFP) |
ISLAMABAD, April 30 (Xinhuanet) -- Pakistan and Japan Saturday vowed to work for renewed, enhanced and robust bilateral relations,according to a joint declaration issued here after visiting Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi held talks with the Pakistani
leaders.
The Japanese government announced the resumption of
yen loan toIslamabad which was suspended in 1998 when Pakistan conducted nuclear
tests and said it would continue to provide support for future projects for the
enhancement of the welfare of the Pakistani people, said the declaration.
Japan welcomed the composite dialogue process between
Pakistan and India including confidence building measures aiming at peacefully
resolving their differences and hoped for its success.
Both countries recognized that the stability and
development ofAfghanistan was vital for regional stability and would continue
this support for that country, said the document.
Both countries, it added, had common interest in the
future of Asia with special focus on counter-terrorism, non-proliferation,
economic cooperation, rule of law and market economy.
Pakistan and Japan also reaffirmed their commitment
to strengthen international disarmament and non-proliferation framework. The two
sides shared the serious concern regarding international black market networks
for the proliferation of technologies and equipment related to weapons of mass
destruction and underscored the need for all countries to identify and dismantle
such networks through cooperative efforts, said the declaration.
They also underlined the need for comprehensive
reform of the United Nations to enable it to effectively respond to the
challenges of this century and both sides spelt out their positionrespectively.
Pakistan was of the view that reform of the UN
Security Councilcould be achieved through an appropriate expansion in the
non-permanent category, the declaration stressed.
Koizumi arrived in Islamabad from New Delhi on
Saturday morningon a two-day formal visit. He held formal talks with Pakistani
President Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz and exchanged views
on bilateral ties, nuclear proliferation, terrorism and the UN reforms.
Koizumi visited India and kicked off his four-nation
tour Friday. He will also visit Luxembourg and Netherlands.
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