The Borneo Post

Putin calls for peace treaty with Japan ahead of visit

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The absence of a peace treaty between Russia and Japan is an anachronis­m inherited from the past and this anachronis­m should be eliminated.

MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin said Russia would strive to reach an elusive deal on a territoria­l dispute and normalise relations with Japan ahead of his visit to the country later this week.

Putin will arrive in Japan on Thursday for talks with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in the hope of breaking the ice on an agreement over the Kuril Islands, seized by Soviet troops in 1945 and demanded back by Tokyo ever since.

The dispute has prevented the countries from signing a formal treaty to end World War II and has hampered their bilateral ties.

“The absence of a peace treaty between Russia and Japan is an anachronis­m inherited from the past and this anachronis­m should be eliminated,” Putin said in an interview with Japan’s Nippon TV and Yomiuri newspaper, according to a transcript released by the Kremlin.

“But how to do this is a difficult question.”

Putin said the absence of a peace treaty was impacting bilateral relations.

“We, of course, will strive to conclude this treaty. We want full normalisat­ion of our relations.”

Abe will host Putin at the hot springs of his ancestral city of Nagato, a location the Kremlin strongman said he hoped would be conducive to “a frank, very substantiv­e and, I hope, fruitful

Vladimir Putin, Russia President

conversati­on.”

Meeting the Japanese journalist­s in the Kremlin, Putin showed off a female Akita dog called Yume, which he was given as a puppy by Tokyo in 2012 in return for Russia’s help after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Japan had offered to give Putin a “bridegroom” for the dog on his upcoming visit but he turned this down, an aide to Abe said Sunday.

The Russian president had earlier introduced Yume to Abe when he visited the Black Sea city of Sochi in 2014.

Putin said Yume is “in great form,” and is a “strict” guard dog.

His two-day visit to Japan, which includes a stop in Tokyo, has long been in the works and comes on the heels of two visits by Abe to Russia this year.

Experts view recent rapprochem­ent efforts as a positive developmen­t for Moscow’s trade ties with Japan but doubt that either side will budge on the territoria­l issue.

The two leaders are expected to sign a series of agreements to bolster business ties battered by sanctions slapped on Moscow by staunch US ally Tokyo over the Ukraine crisis. — AFP

 ??  ?? Putin plays with Yume, an Akita dog, prior to an interview by Nippon Television Network Corporatio­n and Yomiuri Shimbun in the run-up to his official visit to Japan. — AFP photo
Putin plays with Yume, an Akita dog, prior to an interview by Nippon Television Network Corporatio­n and Yomiuri Shimbun in the run-up to his official visit to Japan. — AFP photo

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