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Chinese State Councilor Tang
Jiaxuan (R) is presented a table tennis bat by Koji Kimura, general
director of the Japan Table Tennis Association in Beijing, April 3, 2006.
(Photo:
Xinhua) | BEIJING,
April 3 (Xinhua) -- China is hoping the "ping pong diplomacy," which helped ease
relations with the United States in the 1970s, will help improve China-Japan
relations, which have reached their lowest point due to the Yasukuni Shrine
issue.
"The non-governmental friendly exchanges, including
sports or ping-pong exchanges, are very important (in bilateral relations),"
said Chinese State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan.
Tang made the remarks in meeting with a group of
Japanese table tennis veterans, who are here to reunite with their Chinese
"rivals" to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1956 world championship.
"I hope the Japanese sports circle will play a
constructive role in increasing understanding between the two peoples and pull
China-Japan relations back to the track of healthy and stable development," said
Tang.
In 1956, the Chinese table tennis team was invited to
take part in the 23rd world championship held in Tokyo, the first sports
exchange between the two countries since the founding of the People's Republic
of China in 1949.
"From historical perspectives, this is indeed a big
event in the history of China-Japan sports exchanges," Tang said.
"The sports exchanges have made delightful outcomes
and played a positive role in promoting mutual understanding and friendship
between the two peoples since the normalization of bilateral relations," said
Tang.
Sino-Japanese ties have been soured by Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi's repeated visits to the Yasukuni Shrine, which
honors 14 class-A WWII war criminals.
The leaders of the two countries have halted exchange
visits for more than four years, ever since Koizumi began paying homage to the
Yasukuni Shrine soon after he took office in 2001.
Last Friday, Chinese President Hu Jintao hosted a
rare meeting with the heads of seven Japan-China friendship organizations, led
by former Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto, reiterating China's stance on
promoting China-Japan friendship and the Yasukuni Shrineissue.
"I am ready to hold talks with Japanese leaders as
long as they make a clear-cut decision to pay no more visits to the Yasukuni
Shrine," Hu said.
Hu also urged the non-governmental sectors of the two
countries to help ease bilateral ties, saying "the strive for a pleasant
prospect of China-Japan ties can not be separated from the extensive support and
active participation of the two peoples as well as the arduous efforts made by
the friends of friendly organizations in the two countries."
China and Japan, the two neighboring countries, have
succeeded in promoting bilateral relations through non-governmental exchanges in
the past years.
"Now it is imperative to boost people-to-people
exchanges to mend relations," said Feng Zhaokui, a researcher with the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences.
"The Chinese government and people, as always, attach
great importance to China-Japan relations," said Tang. "Despite many
difficulties, China never changes its fundamental principles of honoring
China-Japan friendship."
"We are ready to make joint efforts with the Japanese
side to enhance friendly exchanges between the two peoples and carry out
pragmatic cooperation in various fields," Tang added.
Koji Kimura, general director of the Japan Table
Tennis Association and a veteran ping-pong player, said he will pass on to the
next generation the friendship cultivated in the past 50 years in an effort to
contribute to the hard-won bilateral relations.
Nearly 80 percent of the Japanese believe that their
country needs to improve relations with China, according to a survey released by
the Japanese Foreign Ministry on March 29. Enditem |