Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a statement in Beijing Tuesday, 
strongly protesting Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's visit again to 
the war criminals-honoring Yasukuni Shrine. 
 
 
 |  Japanese ambassador to 
 China Yuji Miyamoto (L) listens as China's Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing 
 reads from a prepared statement in Beijing August 15, 2006, protesting the 
 visit by Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to the Yasukuni Shrine. 
 China accused Koizumi on Tuesday of "wrecking the political foundations of 
 China-Japan relations" by visiting the shrine that honours Japanese 
 leaders convicted as war criminals. [Reuters]
 | 
And Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing summoned 
Japanese Ambassador to China Miyamoto Yuji Tuesday, lodging serious and solemn 
representations, and strong protests against Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro 
Koizumi's sixth visit to the war criminals-honoring Yasukuni Shrine. 
Li 
said he expresses "strong indignation" and "strong condemnation" over the visit. 
"China strongly requests Japanese leaders to make efforts to remove 
political barriers and push the Sino-Japanese ties back to the normal 
development track at an early date," he said. 
Li told Miyamoto that 
Koizumi's repeated visit to the Yasukuni Shrine is a move that "challenges the 
international justice" and "tramples the conscience of mankind", Li 
said. 
"His move severely hurt the feelings of the people of the 
victim countries, and undermined the political foundation of the China-Japan 
relations," he said. 
Noting China is the biggest victim of Japanese 
militarists' aggression, Li said, "To correctly understand and treat that part 
of history constituted the political basis for the resumption and development of 
the China-Japan relations after the war, and the important preconditions for the 
two countries to face up to the future." 
However, Koizumi, sticking to a 
wrong stance, has repeatedly hurt the feelings of the Chinese people and 
seriously violated the three Sino-Japanese political documents, Li said. 
His move has also made him lose credit to the international community 
and the Japanese people alike, and undermined Japan's state image and interests, 
the foreign minister 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, the foreign minister said. 
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 protests" against such a move that 
severely harms the sentiment of the peoples victimized by the Japanese 
militarists' aggression, and that 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 
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.