Kuwait Times

Japan PM urges warmer ties in talks with South Koreans

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TOKYO: Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told a South Korean delegation Tuesday that the countries “can’t afford to waste time” in improving relations, following years of tensions over wartime issues. The meeting in Tokyo represents a cautious step towards mending ties ahead of expected visits to the two US allies by President Joe Biden, and with growing regional security threats from North Korea and China.

“Given the current internatio­nal situation, where the rules-based internatio­nal order is under threat, now is a time when strategic cooperatio­n... is needed more than ever,” Kishida told the delegation, according to a foreign ministry statement.

“We can’t afford to waste time in improving the JapanSouth Korea relationsh­ip,” he added. Japanese media reports said the seven-member delegation of lawmakers, academics and ex-diplomats handed Kishida a letter from conservati­ve president-elect Yoon Suk-yeol, whose inaugurati­on is on May 10.

Japan and South Korea are democratic market economies and US allies, but their relationsh­ip has been strained at times over disputes related to Tokyo’s 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula.

Ties have been particular­ly frosty under outgoing South Korean president Moon Jae-in, noted Daniel Sneider, a lecturer in East Asian Studies at Stanford University. Moon “is going to leave office without ever having made an official visit to Japan, and without ever

having hosted a Japanese prime minister”, he told AFP.

“That’s remarkable, as a sign of truly one of the worst downturn periods in Korea-Japan relations.” But cooperatio­n between the two nations and the United States is back into focus after Yoon won the last month’s presidenti­al election promising a more hawkish policy on nucleararm­ed North Korea. Members of the South Korean delegation led by conservati­ve lawmaker Chung Jin-suk also met Monday with Japan’s foreign minister and other top officials. The incoming Korean administra­tion “clearly wants to improve relations with Japan” and this represents a “moment of opportunit­y”, Sneider said.

But they are also “playing it very carefully-they’re not trying to put a whole lot on the table upfront, particular­ly regarding the history issues,” which will be delicate to unpick, he said. “The burden is as much on Japan, maybe even more on Japan in some ways, to also show it’s serious on improving relations,” he said.

Kishida will have to show he is “able and willing to break free of the influence and power of the conservati­ve nationalis­ts” in his ruling party.

There has been speculatio­n that Kishida could now attend Yoon’s inaugurati­on, something Japanese prime ministers used to do, Sneider said. —AFP

 ?? ?? TOKYO: This handout picture shows Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (4th R) receiving a letter from Chung Jin-suk (4th L), deputy speaker of South Korea’s National Assembly and the head of a delegation sent by South Korean President-elect Yoon Suk-yeol to Japan, at the prime minister’s office in Tokyo. —AFP
TOKYO: This handout picture shows Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida (4th R) receiving a letter from Chung Jin-suk (4th L), deputy speaker of South Korea’s National Assembly and the head of a delegation sent by South Korean President-elect Yoon Suk-yeol to Japan, at the prime minister’s office in Tokyo. —AFP

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