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Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing
(1st R) talks with Japanese Ambassador to China Miyamoto Yuji in Beijing,
China, on Aug. 15, 2006. Li Zhaoxing lodged serious and solemn
representations, and strong protests against Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi's sixth visit to the war criminals-honoring Yasukuni
Shrine.Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery
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BEIJING,
Aug. 15 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a statement here Tuesday,
strongly protesting Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's visit again to
the war criminals-honoring Yasukuni Shrine.
Regardless of the concern and opposition from the
international community, neighboring Asian countries and the Japanese people,
the statement said, Koizumi insisted on visiting the Yasukuni Shrine, which is a
move that "challenges the international justice and tramples the conscience of
mankind".
Koizumi repeatedly hurt the feelings of the Chinese
people and his acts have made him lose credit to the international community and
the Japanese people alike, and undermined Japan's state image and interests,
said the statement.
The Chinese government expresses "strong protects"
against such a move that severely harms the sentiment of the peoples victimized
by Japanese militarists' aggression, and damages the political basis of the
Sino-Japanese relations, according to the statement.
The maintenance of the sound growth of the
Sino-Japanese relations is in the fundamental interests of the Chinese and
Japanese peoples and conducive to the peace and stability in Asia and the world
at large, the statement said.
With joint efforts from the Japanese statesmen and
people who cherish and engage in the Sino-Japanese friendship, the Chinese
government and people will, on the basis of the three Sino-Japanese political
documents and in the spirit of "learning from the history and facing up to the
future", be unremittingly committed to the peaceful co-existence, friendship for
generations to come, mutually beneficial cooperation and common development
between China and Japan, the statement said.
"We believe that people of insight from all walks of
life in Japan will follow the historical tide and make efforts to wipe out
political barriers so as to push the Sino-Japanese ties back to the normal track
at an early date." it said.
The Yasukuni Shrine, established in 1869 under
Emperor Meiji, honors 2.5 million Japanese war dead including 14 class-A war
criminals responsible for the most atrocious crimes during Japan's war of
aggression against its Asian neighbors during World War II.
The statement said the class-A war criminals honored
in the Yasukuni Shrine were hatchers and directors of Japanese militarists'
aggression, and chief criminals responsible for the great calamity imposed on
Asia and the world in the modern history.
It said China is the biggest victim of Japanese
militarists' aggression and the Chinese people experienced severe sufferings
during that war.
It pointed out that to correctly understand and treat
that partof history constituted the political basis for the resumption and
development of the Sino-Japanese relations after the war, and the important
pre-conditions for the two countries to face up to the future.
Koizumi visited the shrine for five consecutive years
since he took office in April 2001. But Tuesday's visit was the first he paid on
Aug. 15, the anniversary of Japan's defeat in World War II.
Koizumi, who last visited the shrine on October 17,
2005, is expected to step down as leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party
(LDP) as well as prime minister in September.
Koizumi's visits to the shrine have been denounced by
countries which suffered Japan's brutal aggression before and during World War
II.
Koizumi's previous visits have chilled Japan's
relations with neighboring China and South Korea, making the issue the major
stumbling block in the smooth development of relations with those countries.
The visits also drew criticism from the public and
news media in Japan. According to a recent opinion poll conducted by Japan's
Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper, 49 percent of the respondents are opposed to
Koizumi's shrine visit as compared with 43 percent in favor.
Even in the United States, Koizumi's shrine visits
have come under fire.
U.S. House of Representatives Committee on
International Relations Chairman Henry J. Hyde in April sent a letter to the
speaker of the House, Dennis Hastert, demanding Koizumi not be invited for a
speech at Congress during his June visit to the United States, unless Tokyo
pledged the Japanese leader would not pay any Shrine visit after returning home.
Enditem
Foreign ministry statement on Koizumi's shrine visit
BEIJING, Aug. 15 -- Today, Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro Koizumi paid another visit to the Yasukuni Shrine where the
Japanese class-A criminals of WWII are remembered. The Chinese Government hereby
lodges a strong protest against this act that gravely offends the people in
countries victimized by the war of aggression launched by Japanese militarists
and undermines the political foundation of China-Japan relations. Full text>>>