China concerned over Abe's shrine visit   (Xinhua/Reuters)  Updated: 2006-08-04 22:03  
BEIJING -- China on Friday expressed concern over reports that Japanese Chief 
Cabinet Secretary Shinzo Abe visited the Yasukuni Shrine in April, Foreign 
Ministry spokesman said. 
 "We hope that the Japanese side will make similar 
efforts along with the Chinese side to push Sino-Japanese ties back to the track 
of normal development at an early date," spokesman Qing Gang said while asked 
for comments. 
 "It is a common aspiration of the two peoples and conforms with the 
fundamental interest of the two countries for Japanese leaders to stop visiting 
the Yasukuni Shrine, where World War II crimes were worshiped, and take tangible 
action to eliminate political obstacles hindering the normal development of 
Sino-Japanese relations," Qin said. 
 There are reports on Friday that Abe visited the Yasukuni Shrine in April 15 
this year, where World War II crimes were worshiped.
  
 
 
 
   Shinzo Abe (2nd L), 
 Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary and front-runner to become Japan's next 
 prime minister, is led by a Shinto priest as he visits the controversial 
 Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo to pay tribute to the war dead in this August 15, 
 2005 file photo. Abe made a secret pilgrimage earlier this year to the 
 Tokyo war shrine seen by China and South Korea as a symbol of Japan's past 
 militarism, media reports said on 4 August, 2006. 
 [Reuters] |    Abe neither confirmed nor denied 
the reported visit, which would likely appeal to his conservative domestic 
backers but risks further chilling ties with the two Asian countries, where 
bitter memories of Japan's wartime aggression still run deep. 
  South 
Korea's response was swift. 
  "It is disappointing and regrettable that 
the sitting chief cabinet secretary has visited Yasukuni Shrine, where Class-A 
war criminals are honoured," a South Korean foreign ministry official said in 
Seoul. 
  "We stress that Japanese leaders must have a correct view of 
history and good sense if they seek friendly relations in Asia." 
  Abe, a 
soft-spoken security hawk known for his tough stance toward China and North 
Korea, has backed Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's annual visits to the 
Yasukuni Shrine. 
  Abe paid his respects there last August 15, the emotive 
anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War Two. 
  The media reports 
said he had gone again on April 15, after he was appointed chief cabinet 
secretary last October. 
  In a nod to diplomatic concerns, Abe, has 
declined to say whether he would visit the shrine if he succeeds Koizumi when he 
steps down in September. 
  "As I have said many times at my news 
conferences, I want to continue to have the feeling of showing respect by 
praying for the repose of the souls of those who fought and died for their 
country," Abe told a news conference on Friday. 
  "There is no change in 
my feelings." 
  But he added: "In a situation where this issue has become 
a diplomatic and political issue, I have no intention to state whether I have 
gone, or will go." 
  Abe also said it was the government's view that 
visits to the Shinto shrine by cabinet ministers in a private capacity did not 
violate the separation of religion and state mandated by the constitution. 
  Tokyo's ties with Beijing and Seoul have deteriorated since Koizumi took 
office in 2001 and began visiting the shrine, where Japanese wartime leaders 
convicted as war criminals by an Allied tribunal are honoured along with the 
country's 2.5 million war dead. 
  
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