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Related: Japan's post bills set to become
laws
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| Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi
delivers a policy speech to parliament in Tokyo September 26, 2005.
(Xinhua/AFP photo) | TOKYO, Sept. 26 (Xinhuanet) --
Addressing lawmakers in the policy speech for his third term, Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi on Monday vowed to press forward his structural
reforms centered on the postal services shakeup, and expressed the intention to
revamp rocky ties with neighboring countries.
The premier also made clear the move to extend an
anti-terrorism legislation while suggesting Japan would keep its troops staying
longer in Iraq.
Koizumi devoted about half words to postal and
structural reforms in the shortest policy speech ever delivered by him and the
second shortest one made by Japanese prime ministers.
"On the strength of strong public support, I will
have (the postal reform bills) passed within this session," Koizumi told the
lower house legislators.
Koizumi has been putting the privatization of the
Japan Post on the top of his agenda. The project would give birth to four
postalservice stock companies in 2007.
The bills failed to clear the upper house in August,
leading tothe dissolution of the lower house.
The government approved the bills again on Monday
morning and is about to submit it to the parliament. There is little double for
the bills to become into laws as the ruling bloc holds more than two-thirds
seats in the lower house, therefore, can override an unfavorable decision by the
upper house.
Koizumi noted the privatized postal system would
provide better services, help to reinvigorate economy and accelerate the process
toward a slimmer government.
At the same time, Koizumi said the current network of
post offices would maintain, assuaging public concerns that the privatization
would render inconvenient dwindling of the number of post offices, especially in
remote regions.
The premier also pledged to reduce government size,
reshuffle state-related financial institutions and cut the scale of civil
servants as well as personnel costs.
Regarding Japan's refueling assistance to the US-led
anti-terrorism operations in Afghanistan, Koizumi said that the government would
seek the extension of a relative legislation by the end of the session Nov. 1.
Japan is intended to keep the operation running for another year until next
November.
On Iraq, Koizumi suggested that Japan would not
withdraw troopson a rebuilding assistance mission in southern Iraq, which
expires in December.
The government "will make a decision based on a
thorough review of the Iraqi people's willingness and local situation," the
premier repeated the long-standing words.
By strengthening cooperations in broader fields,
Japan aims to build mutual-trust-based, future-oriented friendly ties with
neighboring countries, notably China and South Korea, Koizumi said.
The relations with China and South Korea has been
bumpy recently, mainly due to Japan's wrongheaded attitude toward its aggressive
history record.
Koizumi also said he would make efforts toward
normalizing diplomatic relationship with the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea, provided that the two countries can solve a package of issues, such as
the DPRK's nuclear and missile development as well as the abduction.
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