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President Hu Meets with Japanese PM Abe
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China and Japan agreed to expand their warming bilateral relations by keeping high-level contacts and increasing cooperation in energy and economic and trade sectors.

 

President Hu Jintao and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe reached the agreement on Saturday in the meeting on the sidelines of the 14th Economic Leaders' Meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation.

 

The meeting between Hu and Abe is their second since Abe took office in September. Abe visited Beijing in early October.

 

Hu said that the meeting reflects the "common will of the two countries to improve bilateral relations" and signals the new beginning.

 

The two countries agreed to build a "strategic relationship of mutual interests" and foreign affairs departments will work on details of such relationship.

 

Hu called for more cultural and youth exchanges to increase friendliness between the two peoples so as to consolidate the foundation for bilateral ties.

 

The Chinese President advocated for drafting middle and long-term planning for bilateral co-operation in sectors of trade, investment, information, energy, environmental protection and finance.

 

Abe suggested to start the ministerial-level meeting for economic and trade cooperation as well as the dialogues between energy departments of the two countries to increase their partnership in energy-saving and environmental protection.

 

"President Hu adopts very positive attitudes towards Abe's proposal and believes it is very helpful," said Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao after the meeting.

 

The two leaders also agreed to make joint efforts to promote peace, stability and development in the Northeast Asia and increase coordination in pushing the integration in the region.

 

During the East Asia Summit, which will be held in the Philippines next month, China, Japan and Republic of Korea should increase trilateral co-operation to promote partnership in investment, environmental protection and tourism, according to Abe.

 

Hu cited the questions of history and Taiwan as "sensitive questions" concerning political basis for bilateral ties and called for "appropriate handling" of them.

 

Abe noted that Japan will handle the question of Taiwan according to the joint statement of the two sides, adhering the one-China policy and opposing Taiwan independence.

 

The two foreign ministers announced on Thursday that the two countries will start the joint research on historical issues, a step believed to be good for reducing disputes on historical issues.

 

The repeated visits of Abe's predecessor Junichiro Koizumi to the Yasukuni war shrine had soured bilateral relations. Yasukuni, where Class A war criminals are honoured alongside war dead, is seen by many in Asia as a symbol of Japan's aggression in Asia before and during World War II.

 

The shrine was not mentioned at Saturday's talks, according to Japanese officials.

 

Both Hu and Abe expressed the willingness to advance negotiations on the East China Sea and make it as the area of "peace, friendship and cooperation."

 

The two sides have the long-running row over development of natural resources around a disputed area of the East China Sea. Hu said that they should resort to negotiations and talks, put aside disputes and seek common development.

 

During the meeting, Abe again extended invitation to Hu to visit Japan next year, and Hu accepted the invitation, according to spokesman Liu, noting the arrangements will be made through diplomatic channel.

 

Nuclear issue on Korean Peninsula

 

Both countries insist on the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and agreed to resolve the nuclear issue through dialogues.

 

Under the current situation, all sides must keep "restrains and calmness" to prevent the deterioration of the situation.

 

"Sanction is not the purpose, any sanction alone could not solve the problem," said Hu, insisting that the Six-Party talks is still the "practical and effective" mechanism for solving the problem.

 

China is willing to make joint efforts with other countries to re-start the Six-Party talks in an early date and will increase communication and co-ordination with Japan.

 

Abe appreciated China's efforts in resuming the talks, which involve Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), US, Republic of Korea, China, Russia and Japan, and hope to see positive results.

 

He reiterated that Japan will not develop and own nuclear weapons.

 

(China Daily November 19, 2006)

 

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