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Japan ministers visit controversial war shrine
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 15, 2013


China summons Japan envoy to condemn war shrine visit
Beijing (AFP) Aug 15, 2013 - China summoned Japan's ambassador Thursday to condemn visits by cabinet members to a controversial Tokyo war shrine on the 68th anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender, the foreign ministry said.

Beijing told the envoy it "strongly opposed and strictly condemned" the visits, ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in a statement on its website.

Hong's statement also said that the visits "seriously hurt" the feelings of people in China and other Asian countries that suffered during the war.

The visits "fundamentally attempt to deny and gloss over Japan's history of invasion", the statement said.

"Only by seeing history correctly and learning from it can Japan embrace the future. We urge Japan to follow its promise to seriously examine its history and win the trust of international society through actions," it added.

"Otherwise relations between Japan and its neighbouring countries will have no future."

China reacts strongly to visits to the Yasukuni Shrine by Japanese politicians. Commentaries in state media earlier Thursday also condemned the visits.

Taiwan activists rally against 'Japanese militarism'
Taipei (AFP) Aug 15, 2013 - Dozens of angry Taiwanese set fire to a giant model of a Japanese warship in a rally Thursday after Japanese lawmakers and cabinet ministers visited a controversial Tokyo shrine.

The demonstrators vented their anger outside Japan's de facto embassy in Taipei, burning a model of "Izumo", a helicopter carrier. Japan's biggest warship since World War II, the "Izumo" was unveiled early this month.

Chanting slogans such as "Down with Japanese militarism", the group accused Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of trying to expand Japan's military.

In a statement, Taiwan's foreign ministry urged "the Japanese government and some political figures to learn from the lessons of history and refrain from doing anything that hurt the feelings of people in the neighbouring countries".

Japan's conservative prime minister broke with two decades of tradition Thursday by omitting any expression of remorse over the country's past aggression in Asia on the anniversary of its World War II surrender.

Abe's speech -- which came after nearly 100 lawmakers including two cabinet ministers visited the Yasukuni war shrine -- avoided typical words such as "profound remorse" and "sincere mourning" used by his predecessors to atone for those who suffered as the Imperial Japanese Army stormed across East Asia.

Taiwan was colonised by Japan for half a century until 1945 when Japan surrendered at the end of World War II.

Taiwan has ruled itself after it split with the Chinese mainland in 1949 at the end of a civil war.

But China still considers Taiwan part of its territory awaiting to be reunified -- by force if necessary. cty/pst

Two Japanese ministers were among dozens of lawmakers who visited a war shrine Thursday in a move sure to anger China and South Korea, which see it as a potent symbol of Tokyo's imperialist past.

Security was tight with hundreds of police surrounding the leafy Yasukuni shrine in the heart of Tokyo, as right-wing nationalists carried flags calling on visitors to pray for Japan's "heroic war dead" on the anniversary of the country's surrender in World War II.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a conservative who is bent on reviving Japan as an economic force, was expected to stay away from the shrine but reportedly sent a ritual offering via an aide.

Yasukuni honours 2.5 million citizens who died in World War II and other conflicts, including 14 top convicted war criminals such as General Hideki Tojo, who authorised the attack on Pearl Harbor which drew the United States into the war.

Visits to the site by Japanese politicians enrage neighbouring nations, which view them as an insult and painful reminder of Tokyo's aggression in the first half of the 20th century, including a brutal 35-year occupation of the Korean peninsula.

Yoshitaka Shindo, internal affairs and communications minister in Abe's cabinet, visited the shrine early Thursday.

About 90 other lawmakers arrived at the site later in the morning.

"It was my personal decision to come here," Shindo told reporters, adding it was a "private" matter that should not affect Japan's diplomatic relations.

Another cabinet minister, Keiji Furuya, who is in charge of the North Korean abduction issue, also made the trip. Tokyo is pressing North Korea to return all Japanese citizens kidnapped by Pyongyang in the past -- the victims were largely used to train North Korean spies.

"Consoling the souls of war dead is a purely a domestic issue," Furuya told reporters.

"This is not something that other countries are supposed to criticise or interfere with."

Abe gave a ritual offering earlier this year when nearly 170 lawmakers visited the shrine for a spring festival, grabbing international headlines and sparking diplomatic protests.

On last year's surrender anniversary, more than 50 lawmakers made the pilgrimage to the site near Japan's Imperial Palace, drawing protests from Seoul and Beijing.

On Tuesday, Seoul lashed out ahead of this week's anniversary, saying "our government and people will never tolerate such visits".

"We once again stress that there should be no trips by top Japanese politicians to the Yasukuni shrine," South Korean foreign ministry spokesman Cho Tai-Young told reporters.

Even at home there is significant opposition to Yasukuni, including among some relatives of those honoured there, who say it glorifies war and the darker chapters in Japan's history.

For many, however, walking down the shrine's stone paths lined with cherry trees and past imposing gates dedicated to Shinto -- Japan's animist religion -- is part of a ritual far removed from politics.

"My father held me only once before heading to the war zone knowing Japan would lose," 69-year-old Sumiko Iida told AFP Thursday.

"I'm absolutely against wars."

Chinese state media on Wednesday reported Abe's decision, relayed by the Japanese press and government sources, not to visit the "notorious" shrine.

Earlier in the week, the 35th anniversary of Japan and China normalising diplomatic relations passed quietly. Ties remain frosty following maritime skirmishes over a set of East China Sea islands that are disputed by both countries.

Observers have warned that the contested islands, which are believed to harbour mineral resources beneath their seabed, could be the flashpoint for military conflict between the two Asian giants.

Tokyo is locked in a separate territorial dispute with Seoul.

Abe has mostly focused his attention on stoking Japan's economy since sweeping December elections, but he also openly mulled changing the pacificist constitution imposed on Japan by the United States and its allies after the war.

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