Yahoo – AFP, Natsuko Fukue, August 15, 2016
Tokyo (AFP)
- Tokyo and Seoul struck a conciliatory note Monday on the anniversary of the
end of World War II, with South Korea's president calling for a
"future-oriented" relationship and Japan's prime minister denouncing
the "horrors of war".
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe sent a ritual donation to a controversial Tokyo war shrine
but again avoided visiting it, in an apparent nod to China and South Korea.
South
Korean President Park Geun-Hye, meanwhile, called for a
"future-oriented" relationship with Tokyo even as a group of Seoul
lawmakers sparked official anger in Japan by visiting islets claimed by both
nations.
August 15
is an emotional date in both countries, remembered in Japan as the day in 1945
when wartime Emperor Hirohito announced the surrender. In South Korea it is
marked as the day Japan's harsh 35-year occupation of the Korean peninsula came
to an end.
China,
which was partially occupied by Japan from the early 1930s to 1945, marks the
end of the war on September 3.
A frequent
flashpoint for nationalist tensions is Yasukuni Shrine, which honours millions
of war dead including senior military and political figures convicted of war
crimes after the conflict's end.
Abe visited
in December 2013, sparking fury in Beijing and Seoul and earning a rare
diplomatic rebuke from close ally the United States.
He has
since refrained and reactions by China and South Korea to visits by cabinet
ministers and lawmakers, while still critical, have become less intense.
Separately,
Abe and Emperor Akihito both reiterated Japan's commitment to peace at an
official ceremony to commemorate the war dead.
"We
shall never again repeat the horrors of war," Abe said.
Akihito
expressed similar sentiments.
"Reflecting
on our past and bearing in mind the feelings of deep remorse, I earnestly hope
that the ravages of war will never be repeated," he said.
'Extremely regrettable'
China's
official Xinhua news agency in a commentary said Abe's comments missed the mark
as he "failed again to offer a sincere apology for the country's wartime
aggression in Asia".
Park,
however, stressed the need to look forward in her nationally televised speech
in Seoul.
"We
should newly define relations with Japan to forge future-oriented ties,"
she said.
But her
remarks coincided with the visit by 10 lawmakers to the Dokdo islets where they
met South Korean security personnel based there.
South Korea
has long controlled the islets in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) which are known
in Japanese as Takeshima, but Tokyo has never renounced its claim.
"We
absolutely cannot accept this," top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga
told reporters in Tokyo, calling it "extremely regrettable".
Abe and
Park are scheduled to visit China early next month for a Group of 20 summit
hosted by President Xi Jinping, while Japan is due to host a trilateral
leaders' meeting later this year.
Abe sent
the offering to Yasukuni as president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party
rather than as prime minister in an apparent attempt to lessen criticism.
A total of
67 members of Japan's parliament -- 59 from Abe's ruling LDP -- visited the
shrine en masse in the morning.
Tomomi
Inada, Abe's hawkish new defence minister who has been a frequent visitor to
Yasukuni in past years, was on an official visit to Djibouti.
But two
members of Abe's cabinet showed up at the shrine in the afternoon.
"I
don't think the way a country commemorates people who died for their country
should be a diplomatic issue," Sanae Takaichi, internal affairs minister,
told reporters.



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