Millennium Post

Abe, S Korean premier agree to keep talking to mend ties

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TOKYO: Japanese and South Korean prime ministers agreed on the importance of improving ties but made no apparent breakthrou­gh Thursday in the first high-level meeting since the neighbours’ relations nosedived over trade and history disputes.

South Korea’s Lee Nak-yon handed Japanese leader Shinzo Abe a letter from South Korean President Moon Jae-in during the talks. Lee attended Emperor Naruhito’s enthroneme­nt ceremony Tuesday before meeting with Abe.

An official in Seoul said Moon’s personal letter congratula­ted Japan on the new imperial era of Reiwa and wished for an improvemen­t in bilateral ties. Abe expressed his gratitude for the letter, according to South Korea’s first vice foreign minister, Cho Sei-yong, who spoke in a television briefing after the meeting ended.

Cho said Lee and Abe agreed the two countries must improve their ties and that coordinati­on between them and with Washington was important. Lee called for promoting diverse communicat­ions and exchanges to try to resolve their frayed ties, Cho said.

Abe told Lee that such cooperatio­n is crucial as they face North Korean nuclear and missile threats, according to the Japanese Foreign Ministry. Abe said the currently strained relations should be mended, but Seoul should take the first step.

South Korea’s PM Lee Nak-yon with Japanese PM Shinzo Abe

The meeting was closely monitored for signs of a thaw, but little progress was apparent except for an agreement to keep talking. Still, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the talks were “meaningful” as the two sides exchanged views and reassured that their efforts are continuing.

Lee, who is known as a Japan expert, didn’t disclose more details about the talks as he left Abe’s office. Relations have worsened since Japan in July tightened export controls on key high-tech materials used by South Korean manufactur­ers.

Tokyo cited unspecifie­d security concerns, but Seoul called it retaliatio­n for its courts ordering Japanese companies to compensate Korean laborers for abusing them during Japan’s 1910-1945 colonizati­on.

Japanese lawmakers and

officials have singled out the South Korean court rulings that would freeze the Japanese companies’ assets held in that country, where more than a dozen similar lawsuits are still pending.

The trade spat has also spilled over to security issues. South Korea in August announced a decision to terminate a bilateral military intelligen­ce sharing pact despite North Korea’s resumption of missile tests over the last several months, triggering Washington’s concern. The pact is set to expire in late November. Japan maintains all compensati­on issues, including those of South Korean women who were held as sex slaves at front-line brothels for Japanese soldiers, were settled under the 1965 bilateral treaty under which Tokyo provided USD 500 million in economic cooperatio­n.

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