Japan | Ministers’ war shrine visit irks Beijing after Xi-Abe talks 

People pray at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo

People pray at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo

Three Japanese Cabinet ministers yesterday visited a Tokyo shrine that honors the country’s war dead, including convicted war criminals, drawing a rebuke from China just a day after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and President Xi Jinping met in a bid to smooth ties.
“I offered my sincere appreciation for the people who fought and sacrificed their lives for the sake of their country,” Eriko Yamatani, the disaster management minister, told reporters.
She visited the Yasukuni Shrine along with Haruko Arimura, in charge of promoting women’s empowerment, and Sanae Takaichi, the internal affairs minister, the day after more than 100 lawmakers prayed there.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei called the visits a “wrong attitude to history.” Both China and South Korea, victims of Japan’s wartime aggression and colonial conquest, have called on Tokyo to atone for its militaristic past.
“I need to stress that the China-Japan relations can only advance in a healthy and stable way if Japan can face up to and reflect on the history of aggression and make a clean break from militarism,” Hong said.
Abe on Tuesday sent religious offerings rather than visiting the shrine, presumably seeking to avoid controversy before he leaves Sunday for a state visit to the U.S.
Xi urged Abe during their meeting in Indonesia on Wednesday to better handle Japan’s relationships with its Asian neighbors and show a better attitude toward its history, Chinese state media said. Abe expressed his desire to improve relations, but in a speech to the Asian-African Summit, he did not directly refer to Japan’s past apology over “colonial rule and aggression” as his predecessors have.
His remarks suggest he is likely to avoid making explicit apology in a key statement he plans to issue on Aug. 15 to mark the 70th anniversary of the end of the war.
“I hope Abe truly acknowledges and regrets Japan’s past mistakes and resolves the problem before we all die,” said Kim Bok-tong, 88, a South Korean woman who was one of the sex slaves in Japan’s military brothels during the war.
She also appealed to the U.S. government “to correct Abe’s actions and not support him. That’s what America should be doing to its good friend.” Mari Yamaguchi, Tokyo, AP

Categories Asia-Pacific