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Special report:
Islets dispute between ROK and
Japan
TOKYO, April 27 (Xinhua) -- Japanese vice foreign
minister will visit South Korea next week to mend bilateral relationship, which
was further strained due to a recent row over sovereignty of controversial
islets, Kyodo News said on Thursday.
During his two-day visit, Yasuhisa Shiozaki is
expected to meet South Korean Foreign Affairs and Trade Minister Ban Ki-Moon and
discuss the issue of a set of South Korea-controlled islets in the Sea of Japan,
which is also claimed by Japan.
The set of islets in question is known as Takeshima
in Japan and Dokdo in South Korea. Last week, South Korea dispatched gunboats to
the disputed area after Japan announced it would conduct a maritime survey
around the mostly uninhabited islets.
The two reached a last-minute compromise to resolve
the standoff on Saturday, with Japan agreeing to cancel the survey as long South
Korea delays plans to rename seafloor topography near the islets.
Tokyo and Seoul agreed to resume talks as early as in
May on demarcating their exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the waters near the
islets. Such talks have been suspended since 2000.
Besides disputes on the islets, the two nations are
also at odds over Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's repeated visits to
the war-linked Yasukuni Shrine, where 14 top war criminals are honored along
with over 2 million war dead. Seoul also held that several versions of Japan's
history textbooks whitewashed Japan's wartime atrocities.
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