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TOKYO, June 4 (Xinhuanet) -- The Tokyo-based Yasukuni
Shrine on Saturday refused to separate memorial tablets of Class-A war criminals
from Japan's ordinary war dead despite of proposal of domestic statesmen and
strong protests from many Asian countries, Kyodo News reported Saturday.
"This is a matter of Japanese religious faith...Their
separate enshrinement will never happen," the shrine said in a written statement
in response to questions from Kyodo.
Yasukuni Shrine's statement on a proposal to
separately enshrine 14 Class-A war criminals -- including wartime Prime Minister
Gen. Hideki Tojo -- from Japan's 2.5 million war dead came as Japan's ties with
China and South Korea encounter difficulties due to Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi's repeated visits to the Tokyo shrine.
In view of the cooling relationship of Japan with
China and South Korea, some legislators of Koizumi's governing Liberal
Democratic Party proposed removing the tablets of the Class-A war criminals from
Yasukuni.
Among others, Hidenao Nakagawa, chairman of the LDP's
Parliament Affairs Committee, said last Sunday it is desirable that the Class-A
war criminals be enshrined separately from the rest of the war dead through
discussions between the shrine and families of the war dead.
Five Japanese former prime ministers and House of
Representatives Speaker Yohei Kono on Wednesday also reached an agreement urging
Koizumi to halt his visits to the notorious shrine in order to avoid further
worsening relations with China.
Yasuhiro Nakasone, who was unable to attend the
former prime ministers' meeting, also expressed similar opinions to Kono.
Moreover, the former prime minister on Friday reiterated that Koizumi should
stop visiting the shrine.
Kiichi Miyazawa, Toshiki Kaifu, Tomiichi Murayama,
Ryutaro Hashimoto, Yoshiro Mori all agreed on the issue in a gathering on
concerns of current difficulties in Japan-China relations.
According to Asahi Shimbun's report on Saturday,
Nakasone also made a suggestion to separately enshrine the Class-A war
criminalsand the Japanese war dead. "If the separation needs time, it is wise
for Koizumi to make decision of stopping the visits during the time," Nakasone
was quoted by the daily.
Nakasone, once visited shrine as prime minister,
stopped the shrine visit due to protests from China, South Korea and some other
Asian countries in order to no longer damage ties with the countries and hurt
their people's heart.
In spite of strong protests from China and other
Asian countries, Koizumi has paid four visits to the shrine since he took office
in April 2001, with the latest one on New Year's Day in 2004.
He has repeatedly made chicaneries saying his visits
are aimed at paying tribute to Japan's war dead, not to the Class-A war
criminals, and has pledged that Japan will not wage war again.
As a widely known fact, the 14 Class-A war criminals
honored atthe shrine are responsible for the most atrocious crimes in Japan's
war of aggression against its Asian neighbors. Enditem |