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Japan PM hopes to meet China, S. Korea heads to ease ties
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) March 17, 2013


Japan PM warns defence academy graduates of 'provocations'
Tokyo (AFP) March 17, 2013 - Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called on new graduates of Japan's National Defence Academy Sunday to guard the country against "provocations" as tensions simmer with China over the sovereignty of an island chain.

In a dramatic speech, he emphasised that the security situation had changed since the students started their course four years ago.

"Unlike four years ago... provocations are continuing against our country's territorial land, sea and air," Abe told the graduation ceremony at the school in Yokosuka outside Tokyo.

"What is happening in the field where you will be is a harsh reality and a crisis that is there," he added.

"I wish you to dedicate yourselves to noble duty in the field, to defend the people and the country."

Drawing a vivid picture of their mission, Abe said: "The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood."

The line was a direct quote from a speech made by US President Theodore Roosevelt in 1910 in Paris.

Abe made the speech as China continued sending state-owned ships close to the disputed Tokyo-controlled Senkaku islands, which Beijing also claims and calls the Diaoyus.

Three marine surveillance ships from China were spotted Sunday morning about 40 kilometres (25 miles) off Kubajima, one of the islands in the East China Sea.

Chinese ships have routinely circled the islands since September when Tokyo nationalised some of the chain. They have sporadically entered 12-nautical-mile territorial waters around the islands.

Abe's Liberal-Democratic Party pledged at an annual convention Sunday to accelerate efforts to reform Japan's pacifist post-war constitution to emphasise the country's rights to defences and create a fuller military.

As part of the speech to graduates, Abe -- a hawk who took power for a second time in December when his conservative party scored an election landslide --

noted that his government had approved a rise in defence spending for the first time in 11 years.

"We will aim to upgrade the ability of the Self-Defence Forces in such regions as the southwest region (Okinawa)," he said. Japan considers the Senkakus as a part of Okinawa.

"Our country must play a greater role in enhancing the deterrent power of the Japan-US security arrangements," he added.

Most of the academy's 424 new graduates attended the ceremony, including 27 women and 11 foreign students from Cambodia, Indonesia, Mongolia, Thailand and Vietnam.

Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Sunday he hoped to meet the Chinese and South Korean leaders soon to improve relations strained by separate territorial rows.

But his ruling party also pledged the same day to push for changes to Japan's pacifist constitution -- a move likely to stir unease in both the countries, which were among victims of Tokyo's 20th century militarism.

"I am in the same generation as the two new leaders," Abe told an annual convention of his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), referring to Chinese President Xi Jinping, 59, and South Korean President Park Geun-Hye, 61.

The 58-year-old Abe became prime minister in December for a second time when his conservative party secured a landslide election victory, while Tokyo was locked in disputes with Beijing and Seoul over island chains.

"For prosperity and stability in the region, it is necessary for the three of us to build mutual understanding," Abe told the convention.

"I want to say that Japan's door is always open toward China," said Abe, who was previously premier from 2006-2007.

But earlier in the day, the premier urged graduates of the National Defence Academy to guard the country against "provocations", an apparent reference to the row with Beijing over sovereignty of a Tokyo-controlled island chain.

Chinese ships have routinely circled the Senkaku islands, which Beijing claims as the Diaoyus, since Tokyo nationalised some of them in September.

Abe, in his speech to graduates, emphasised that the security situation had changed since they started their course four years ago.

"Unlike four years ago... provocations are continuing against our country's territorial land, sea and air," he told the graduation ceremony.

"What is happening in the field where you will be is a harsh reality and a crisis that is there," he added.

"I wish you to dedicate yourselves to noble duty in the field, to defend the people and the country."

The LDP convention adopted a wide-ranging action plan, including efforts to create an "independent constitution" to replace the US-imposed post-war charter which bans the use of force in settling international disputes.

The ban limits the so-called Self-Defence Forces to a strictly defensive role and bars them from taking aggressive action.

The hawkish Abe has said Japan must redefine its rules of engagement to provide an effective deterrent against North Korea and balance China's growing military might.

Abe said in January he intends to change the constitution, by modifying an article which stipulates that amendments need a two-thirds majority in parliament.

The LDP and its junior coalition partner New Komeito have a more-than two-thirds majority in the lower house, but New Komeito and some LDP factions are cautious about amendments.

The less powerful upper house is controlled by no single party, but the opposition Democratic Party of Japan has the greatest number of seats.

Elections for half the upper house seats must be held around July.

"We will definitely win through the (upper house) election and reestablish a proud Japan," Abe told the convention.

The party action plan also reaffirmed Japan's intention to join the US-led Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade talks, despite persistent objections from farmers and others.

It said Japan will negotiate "in a manner which will protect national interests including the agriculture and fishery sector".

"I will definitely protect Japan's agriculture and food. I want you to trust me," Abe said.

New China FM unlikely to soften stance in Japan row: media
Tokyo (AFP) March 17, 2013 - China's appointment of a former ambassador to Japan as its foreign minister is unlikely to soften Beijing's position over islands at the centre of a dispute with Tokyo, Japanese media said on Sunday.

Wang Yi's new job was approved on Saturday by the National People's Congress, Beijing's rubber-stamp parliament, which also promoted his predecessor Yang Jiechi to a member of the State Council, China's cabinet.

"Although (Wang) is fluent in Japanese, well versed on Japan and has contacts with the Japanese political world, it is contrarily damaging for him to be seen at home as sympathetic to Japan," the newspaper Sankei Shimbun said.

The conservative daily noted that the outgoing foreign minister had repeatedly talked tough against Japan, particularly over the Tokyo-administered Senkaku islands in the East China Sea, which Beijing also claims and calls the Diaoyus.

"Therefore, it is seen difficult to improve the Japan-China ties at an early date," Sankei said.

The Jiji Press news agency quoted a Japanese diplomatic source as saying: "Being well informed on Japan, he may rather take a harder line as he takes care not to be criticised for being weak-kneed."

Wang, 59, served as ambassador to Japan from 2004 to 2007 and was also a diplomat in China's embassy in Tokyo from 1989 to 1994. He has been in charge of Taiwan affairs on the State Council since 2008.

Japanese media also pointed out that when Wang was ambassador in Tokyo he helped mend the bilateral ties strained through visits by then prime minister Junichiro Koizumi to a Tokyo shrine honouring the Japanese war dead, including World War II leaders, amid protests from neighbouring countries.

"It is apparent that the government of Xi Jinping is considering treating the Japan-China ties carefully," the Asahi Shimbun said.

"His first task will be an attempt to normalise the Japan-China dialogue which has been mired in an awkward state amid a chain of mistrust and to pave the way for a Japan-China summit meeting," the influential daily said.

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