The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Asian neighbours protest as Japan PM sends offering to war dead shrine

-

TOKYO: China and South Korea called on Japan to face up to its wartime past after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe sent an offering to a shrine to war dead yesterday, the anniversar­y of Japan’s World War Two surrender.

Masahiko Shibayama, a lawmaker who made the offering on Abe’s behalf, said he did so to express condolence­s for those who died in the war and to pray for peace.

He added Abe said he was sorry he could not visit the Yasukuni shrine.

Past visits by Japanese leaders to Yasukuni have outraged Beijing and Seoul because it honours 14 Japanese leaders convicted by an Allied tribunal as war criminals, along with other war dead, sometimes chilling ties for months.

China’s relations with Japan have long been poisoned by what Beijing sees as Tokyo’s failure to atone for its occupation of parts of China before and during World War Two. Japan occupied Korea from 1910-1945.

But maintainin­g harmony with China and South Korea is now more important than ever amid heightened tensions in the wake of North Korean missile tests, threats from North Korea to strike the area around the US Pacific territory of Guam and US President Donald Trump’s warning of retaliatio­n.

“After the war, our country has consistent­ly taken steps as a country that abhors war and treasures peace, and has made efforts to promote the peace and prosperity of the world,” Abe said at a national ceremony.

“We intend to keep this immovable policy firmly, throughout the ages, while facing history with humility.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia