Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe yesterday called for “frank” summit talks with China and South Korea to help solve historical and territorial disputes that have soured ties between the neighbors.
A year of heated arguments have prevented the three from holding any top-level meetings, with Beijing and Seoul accusing Abe of showing a lack of remorse for World War II wrongs.
“We should hold a summit meeting and have a frank discussion,” Abe said in an interview on Japan’s public broadcaster NHK, two days after Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Fumio Kishida called for similar talks.
Abe, Chinese President Xi Jinping and South Korean President Park Geun-hye all came to power about one year ago, but entrenched positions and growing nationalism in the three countries have prevented them from getting together.
Seoul and Beijing were angered by Abe’s visit last month to a shrine in Tokyo that counts 14 senior World War II criminals among the 2.5 million souls it commemorates.
China and South Korea see the Yasukuni Shrine as a symbol of Japan’s wartime aggression in Asia.
Yesterday, Abe reiterated he had visited to make a pledge against war, and like other leaders around the world to pray for those who lost their lives for their countries.
“I want people to think about whether this is wrong. If they think about it, I think the misunderstanding will go away,” he said.
Separate territorial disputes over the uninhabited Tokyo-controlled Senkaku Islands — also claimed by Taiwan, which calls them the Diaoyutai Islands (釣魚台) and China — in the East China Sea, which Beijing and Seoul say have their roots in Japan’s early imperial ambitions, have also roiled relations.
Abe said a summit should be held “all the more because there are these issues,” but added that Tokyo would not agree to any concessions over disputed issues as a precursor to discussions.
“It would be unreasonable if Japan must clear hurdles for summit talks,” he said.
On Friday, Kishida said the respective leaders should “make efforts to solve” their disputes.
The call came after Japan brushed off comments by China’s envoy to the African Union in which he branded Abe a “troublemaker.”
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