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BEIJING, May 23 (Xinhuanet) -- China is "extremely unsatisfied" with the remarks Japanese leaders repeatedly made on visiting the Yasukuni Shrine recently, which go against improving bilateral relations, said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan Monday night.
Kong said the Chinese government attaches great
importance to Sino-Japanese relations and has made unremitting efforts to
improve and develop bilateral relations. "Vice Premier Wu Yi's visit to Japan is
a best demonstration of it."
Wu arrived in Japan last Tuesday for a visit and left
the country Monday.
"To our regret, during Vice Premier Wu Yi's stay in
Japan, Japanese leaders repeatedly made remarks on visiting the Yasukuni Shrine
that go against the efforts to improve Sino-Japanese relations," said Kong.
"China is extremely unsatisfied with it."
On May 16, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
suggested that he would visit the Yasukuni Shrine again this year during
questioning at the House of Representatives Budget Committee, saying "I don't
understand why I should stop visiting the Yasukuni Shrine."
Koizumi said last Friday that when he visits the
Yasukuni Shrine he does so as a private individual and not in the capacity as
prime minister.
The Yasukuni Shrine honors Japan's war dead,
including 14 Class-A war criminals responsible for Japan's aggression before and
during World War II.
China considers the shrine visits by Japanese leaders
as one ofthe most difficult issues in current China-Japan political relations,
saying the issue reflects what the Japanese government thinks about Japan's
history of aggression against other Asian countries.
Kong said, "China sincerely hopes that the two
countries could make joint efforts to fulfill Chinese President Hu Jintao's
five-point proposal on improving China-Japan relations, so as to bring the
relations to the track of healthy and stable development."
President Hu initiated the proposal during a meeting
with Koizumi on April 23 in Jakarta. Enditem |