Oman Daily Observer

China, Japan pledge ‘new starting point’

BOOST TO TIES: Abe calls for warmer relations and says they should work together on North Korea

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TOKYO: Asian rivals China and Japan on Monday pledged a “new starting point” for bilateral ties, vowing close cooperatio­n amid a flurry of diplomacy on the North Korean missile threat and global trade tensions.

Welcoming Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi for a rare three-day visit, Japanese Premier Shinzo Abe called for warmer relations between the two countries and said they should work together on North Korea.

Abe said he would be visiting the United States for talks with President Donald Trump to seek the “complete and irreversib­le denucleari­sation” of North Korea and added “we want to cooperate with China.”

“We hope to develop a strategic, mutually beneficial Japan-china relationsh­ip in various fields,” said Abe.

After meeting Abe, Wang told reporters that Beijing wanted to place “Sino-japanese cooperatio­n at a new starting point” and cooperate on energy, financial and environmen­tal issues.

Tokyo is battling to stay relevant amid a string of summits on North Korea’s nuclear programme in which Beijing is likely to be a major player.

With this in mind, Japan is pushing to host a trilateral meeting between Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Abe said this would be held “after Golden Week”, a series of national holidays that ends on May 6.

Bilateral visits by Abe and Chinese President Xi Jinping are also being planned.

China demonstrat­ed its significan­t influence over its reclusive ally when Xi hosted the North’s leader Kim Jong-un and his wife in Beijing last month.

With Moon and Trump also preparing to meet Kim, reported efforts by Japan to reach out to Pyongyang have gone ignored.

Wang said he and Abe spoke about North Korea.

“At present, the nuclear issue on the peninsula has clearly eased from a situation of a crippling crisis and has returned to the direction of denucleari­sation,” Wang said, reiteratin­g Beijing’s call for a political and peaceful settlement.

Meanwhile, Japan and China are targets of Trump’s steel and aluminium tariffs, with Beijing also targeted with a further heavy levy.

Japan’s Foreign Minister Taro Kono and Wang did not specifical­ly mention the proposed US trade policies, as its implementa­tion and consequenc­es were still unclear.

But they noted the global economy has dramatical­ly changed during the eight years the bilateral dialogue has stalled.

“We must have fresh perspectiv­es and think about ways of cooperatio­n and coordinati­on,” said Kono.

“We share the common understand­ing that starting of a trade war would have a significan­t impact on the prosperity of the global economy.”

Following his meeting with Abe, Wang said Japan understand­s the importance of safeguardi­ng the rules of the World Trade Organizati­on.

“The consensus reached by both parties is that facing the rise of protection­ism, we have all promised to use our actions to safeguard the global free trade system with the WTO as its core and jointly build a more open world economy,” Wang said.

 ?? — AFP ?? China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi (L) with Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at the start of their meeting at Abe’s official residence in Tokyo on Monday.
— AFP China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi (L) with Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at the start of their meeting at Abe’s official residence in Tokyo on Monday.
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