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SEOUL, April 22 (Xinhua) -- South Korean Vice Foreign
Minister Yu Myung-hwan said Saturday that Japan agreed to withdraw its maritime
survey plan in the disputed waters after a two-day negotiation.
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| South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan attends a news conference after the two-day negotiation with his Japanese counterpart Shorato Yachi. [Photo: Xinhua/Reuters] | "The Japanese side has agreed to stop its scheduled
underwater topographic survey," Yu, South Korea's chief negotiator for the talks
with his Japanese counterpart Shorato Yachi, told a news conference at 8 p.m.
(1100 GMT).
The two sides have also decided to hold talks on the
disputed boundaries of their exclusive economic zones as early as May, he added.
The dramatic agreement came just one hour after South
Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Bae Young-han told reporters that "The talks
broke down in the end."
The two-day negotiation, originally set to be
finished at about 3:30 p.m. (0630 GMT) on Saturday, was extended to nearly 7:30
p.m.(1000 GMT) until both sides compromised at the last moment.
In exchange for Japan's withdrawal of survey plan,
South Korea promised to suspend plans that would rename seafloor topography near
the Dokdo islets, which both Japan and South Korea claim sovereignty, in June's
International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) convention, the Kyodo News
reported.
The last-minute compromise over the issue is expected
to defuse the escalating tension between South Korea and Japan.
Yachi arrived here on Friday to seek a diplomatic
solution to the dispute triggered by Japan's plan to conduct maritime survey in
waters near the South Korea-controlled Dokdo islets, called as "Takeshima" by
Japan.
South Korea insists that the waters near Dokdo islets
are part of its exclusive economic zone and Japan has no rights to conduct such
a survey without Seoul's approval.
Two survey ships of Japan's Coast Guard left for the
waters near the Dokdo islets on Wednesday.
South Korea deployed more than 20 armed vessels near
the Dokdo islets in response to Japan's dispatch of the survey ships and issued
stern warnings against Japan.
According to South Korea's Yonhap News, Japan
registered its own names for the seafloor near Dokdo with the IHO in the 1970s.
Seoul is pushing a plan to register Korean names for the undersea features at
the annual IHO meeting in June.
Japanese officials said earlier that Japan brought
out the survey plan in a bid to block South Korea's efforts to introduce new
names for the seafloor, the Yonhap said. Enditem |