Japan
agrees with the basic concept and spirit of Taiwan's East China Sea Peace
Initiative, Japan's foreign minister said in a statement released by Japan's
Interchange Association Friday.
According
to the statement, Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba said that although some parts
of the initiative and its "implementation guidelines" were
unacceptable to Japan, Japan acknowledges and agrees with the basic concept and
spirit of the proposal.
Gemba also
expressed hope that actions that increase tensions between Japan and Taiwan
will not be taken again.
He said the
Japanese government expects an improvement in bilateral relations and has
recently proposed to resume fishery talks between Taiwan and Japan.
According
to the Interchange Association, which represents Japan's interests in Taiwan in
the absence of diplomatic ties, Gemba gave his message to Tadashi Imai, the
association's president, at a recent meeting and asked him to relay it to
Taiwan.
The date of
the meeting was not specified.
The
statement did not specifically mention the disputed Diaoyutai Islands in the
East China Sea, which are claimed by both Taiwan and Japan and have been the
source of much of the recent friction between the two countries.
Tensions
have mounted over the Diaoyutais since Japan agreed to buy three of the chain's
islets from their private owner on Sept. 10 in a bid to further assert its
sovereignty over the archipelago.
Gemba
acknowledged, however, that because Taiwan and Japan are in close proximity to
each other, "unsettled issues" are sometimes unavoidable. He said the
two sides should maintain rational communications and not let bilateral ties be
affected by "isolated cases."
The East
China Sea Peace Initiative, proposed by Taiwan's president Ma Ying-jeou in
August, urges all claimants to the disputed islands to refrain from taking
confrontational actions, shelve their differences, observe international law
and resolve disputes through peaceful means.
The
initiative also called for all sides to seek a consensus on a code of conduct
for the East China Sea and establish a mechanism allowing the parties to
cooperate in exploring the region's resources.
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