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Beijing, Dec. 31 -- The year 2005 ends with
deteriorating Sino-Japanese political relations due to Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi's repeated visits to the Yasukuni Shrine.
Turning a deaf ear to the criticisms and protests at home and abroad, the prime minister has paid tribute to the
shrine honouring 2.5 million Japanese war dead, including a dozen World War II
criminals, for five consecutive years since he came to power in 2001.
Koizumi's action has seriously hurt the feelings of
the people of the then war-torn countries in Asia, including China and the
Republic of Korea (ROK), and badly damaged Japan's ties with its neighbours.
Reciprocal visits between the Chinese and Japanese
leaders have been absent for four years, and this is abnormal for two countries
with frequent economic exchanges.
Even worse, Koizumi's obstinacy on the issue of
shrine visits has brought all scheduled meetings to a halt, even on
international occasions, including the postponed meeting among Chinese, Japanese
and the ROK leaders on the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) conference in Kuala Lumpur in December.
Thus, the Sino-Japanese political relationship has
been at a low ebb over the years. And Koizumi should be held accountable for
this.
Koizumi's shrine tours have had dire political
consequences as they have become a tremendous obstacle to the development of
Sino-Japanese friendship and co-operation.
Only when the Japanese leaders take a correct
attitude toward the country's history of aggression, and express apology and
remorse for Japan's war past can the impasse be broken.
However, the Japanese leaders have been trying to
justify the shrine visits.
Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso has claimed that
"the only countries in the world that talk about Yasukuni are China and the
ROK," and Japan does not have to heed their calls.
Koizumi described the issue as "an invalid diplomatic
card" wielded by China and the ROK when giving his explanation for the delay of
the trilateral meeting.
The remarks by the Japanese leaders showed that they
did not want to solve the problem, and they had no respect for China and the
ROK. Such an attitude has dampened the hope that the frozen Sino-Japanese
relationship would thaw in the near future.
It is well known that the Chinese and Japanese people
are looking forward to common development and prosperity.
However, Koizumi's visits to the shrine have strained
political relations, reduced mutual trust, intensified antagonism and put the
two countries at odds. The situation has aroused concerns among the people in
both countries.
The tension between the two countries not only
hampers economic exchanges, it may also affect regional stability and
development, analysts said.
Trade and economic co-operation between China and
Japan have already been negatively affected by their tense political
relationship, which has started cooling down extensive business activities
between the two sides.
Japan's 11-year-old status as the largest trading
partner of China has been taken over by the European Union.
In the first eight months of 2005, Sino-Japanese
trade increased only by 10.3 per cent, compared with the 23.5-per-cent growth
achieved by China globally, according to the Chinese Ministry of Commerce.
The trade with Japan accounted for 14.5 per cent of
China's total foreign trade volume in 2004, down from the 17.5 per cent in 2000,
the ministry said.
As close neighbours with their economies remarkably
complementary to each other, China and Japan are regrettably seeing their
economic co-operation growing at a slower pace.
At the same time, the cold political ties hinder
bilateral co-operation on large-scale economic projects.
Economists have warned that it is hard to maintain
the flourishing economic relations between China and Japan as long as their
political discord remains unsettled.
In order to put the Sino-Japanese relationship back
on to the normal track, more joint efforts are needed to address the shrine
issue, particularly positive actions by the Japanese leaders.
China and Japan need to conduct strategic dialogues
and co-ordinate their positions on a wide range of issues, such as the
environment, energy and security.
Koizumi's visits to the shrine are preventing the two
sides from fully playing their roles in jointly dealing with international
affairs. Japanese leaders should be aware of this.
Nevertheless, the Japanese prime minister has shown
no sign of budging on the issue. His persistent visits to the war shrine have
manifested his intent to distort history and glorify militarism. It is hoped
that Japanese leaders would not further follow the wrong path and go down in
Japan's modern history as people who have soured relations with neighbouring
countries.
(Source: China Daily) |