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BEIJING, May 25 (Xinhua) -- A senior Communist Party
of China (CPC) official said here Thursday that China hopes Japan would work
with China to push bilateral ties back on the track.
"We hope Japan would take concrete measures to push China-Japan ties back on the track of healthy and stable
development," He Guoqiang, a member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central
Committee, told Tetsuzo Fuwa, former chairman of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of Japan.
Leaders of the two countries have suspended exchanges
since 2001, after Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro began paying homage
at the controversial Yasukuni Shrine that honors convicted Japanese war
criminals.
He Guoqiang said leaders of the CPC and the Chinese
government have expressed commitment to improving China-Japan ties on many
occasions, which shows China's positive attitude and sincerity.
Chinese President Hu Jintao had explained China's
policy on China-Japan relations on March 31 in a meeting with the heads of seven
Japan-China friendship organizations.
Hu made it clear that the major obstacle in
China-Japan relations was Japanese leaders' insistence on visiting the Yasukuni
Shrine.
Hu, however, noted that the Chinese government
believed the Japanese people's visits to the Yasukuni Shrine were different from
that of their leaders, and ordinary Japanese soldiers who were forced into war
were different from the few militarists and class A war criminals.
In response, Fuwa said his party would continue to
make efforts to help repair relations between the two countries.
Fuwa was leading a delegation of the Communist Party
of Japan to have academic exchanges with the Communist Party of China in
Beijing. Enditem |