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Japan ex-PM Fukuda meets China's Xi amid tensions
by Staff Writers
Boao, China (AFP) April 7, 2013


Kerry to discuss 'sensitive issues' in Beijing: China
Beijing (AFP) April 8, 2013 - China and the US will aim to "solve sensitive issues" during a weekend visit by Secretary of State John Kerry, Beijing's foreign ministry said Monday, as the two row over trade and North Korea racks up tensions.

Foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Kerry would meet Chinese leaders on April 13 and 14, in his first trip to Asia as America's top diplomat. He is currently in the Middle East and will also go to Japan and South Korea.

The Asia leg of Kerry's travel comes as concern grows that North Korea is preparing a fourth nuclear test and a missile launch.

Pyongyang has ratcheted up tensions since it carried out its third nuclear test in February with provocative language and threats of a nuclear strike, despite repeated appeals for restraint by Beijing, its sole major ally.

The two sides will exchange views on "China-US relations and international and regional issues of common interest", Hong said.

China and the US are embroiled in a series of disputes over issues ranging from cyberspying to currency.

Hong said China was ready to "deepen practical cooperation across the board and manage and solve sensitive issues and continue to embark on the road of building a constructive partnership and a new type of major country relations so as to benefit the people of both countries".

Washington is concerned that the Chinese government is sponsoring some cyberattacks against US corporations, infrastructure and government.

The US also accuses China of undervaluing its yuan currency, keeping Chinese exports unfairly cheap.

"Currently, China-US relations are at an important period of carrying forward the past achievements," said Hong Lei.

Former Japanese premier Yasuo Fukuda said he briefly met Chinese President Xi Jinping on Sunday in his capacity as chairman of an international conference, but there was no discussion of bilateral tensions.

Fukuda is serving as chairman of the Boao Forum for Asia, touted as an Asian version of the World Economic Forum in Davos. The annual Boao meeting is held on the southern Chinese island of Hainan.

Fukuda told reporters that he and other forum executives attended a meeting with Xi that lasted about 20 minutes during which discussions were focused largely on conference issues.

"It's not the kind of place to talk just about Japan and Japan-China relations," Fukuda said.

Still it marked a rare chance for a high-level meeting as Sino-Japanese ties remain strained since a long-simmering territorial dispute over a group of islands in the East China Sea intensified last year.

Japan administers the unoccupied islands, which it calls Senkaku. China, which also claims them, refers to them as Diaoyu. The waters around the islands are considered potentially rich in natural resources.

Fukuda, the son of a former prime minister, served in the post for a year from September 2007 and has been an influential figure on the Japanese political scene.

Tensions spiked last September after the Japanese government purchased islets in the chain it did not already own, sparking violent demonstrations in Chinese cities.

Fukuda praised a speech Xi made to forum participants after their meeting in which China's new leader called for settling disputes through dialogue.

Fukuda said what was needed now was for the two sides to step up diplomatic efforts.

"And I think it's a matter of how to increase trust between leaders," he said.

Asked if his attendance at the forum could contribute to such diplomatic efforts at improving relations, Fukuda said that it was hard to know.

"But in general I feel that both sides are of the mind that something needs to be done," he added.

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China to open disputed islands to tourism: official
Boao, China (AFP) April 7, 2013
China is to open disputed South China Sea islands up to tourism this month, state media reported Sunday, a move likely to inflame a long-running territorial row with its neighbours. The plans to allow tourists to visit the Paracel Islands before the May Day holiday is the latest stage in Beijing's development of the territory, which has previously angered Vietnam and caused concern in Washin ... read more


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