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TaipeiTimes: Tokyo, Seoul try to bury hatchet, hail ties

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Yoon and Kishida agreed to cooperate with the US as it seeks partners to impose sweeping curbs on the sale of advanced chip equipment to China​


Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida yesterday said his “heart aches” for Koreans who suffered under colonialism, as Seoul and Tokyo seek a rapid reset of long-strained ties in the face of North Korean threats.

Kishida was in Seoul on the first official bilateral visit by a Japanese leader to South Korea in more than a decade. He met South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, who has made improving testy relations with Japan a top priority for his administration.

The East Asian neighbors, both crucial security allies of the US, have long been at odds over historic issues linked to Japan’s brutal 1910 to 1945 colonial occupation of the Korean Peninsula, including sexual slavery and forced labor.

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Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, left, shakes hands with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol at a joint news conference after their meeting in Seoul yesterday.Photo: AFP​


“My heart aches as many people went through a very difficult and sad experience in the harsh environment at that time,” Kishida said, speaking after the summit with Yoon.

Kishida’s visit showed that “shuttle diplomacy” — regular mutual visits and high-level talks — was back on track, Yoon said, after a lengthy pause during a bitter trade spat linked to the forced labor issue.

“Based on the friendship and trust I have with Prime Minister Kishida, I will promote deeper bilateral cooperation toward a new future,” said Yoon, who was in Tokyo in March for a fence-mending visit.

Yoon, who took office last year, has sought to bury the historical hatchet.

He earlier announced a plan to compensate victims without direct involvement from Tokyo — a move that was unpopular domestically, but helped improve ties with Japan.

“As the South Korean government moves forward ... I am touched to see how so many people are opening their hearts to the future while not forgetting the hardships of the past,” Kishida said.

Experts had widely predicted Tokyo would not offer a new apology, and Kishida stopped short of this, instead reaffirming the “heartfelt apology” made by previous administrations in Tokyo.

“There are parts of Kishida’s statement that definitely fall short of our expectations,” Choi Eunmi, a researcher at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, told YTN.

“But even though he said it was his personal feeling, I would like to note his expression of sincerity,” she said. “And I think this is meaningful as we are just taking our first step in restoring shuttle diplomacy.”

Efforts to mend ties come as North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, who last year declared his country an “irreversible” nuclear power, doubles down on weapons development and testing.

“Prime Minister Kishida and I shared the recognition that North Korea’s nuclear and missile development poses a grave threat to peace and stability not only on the Korean Peninsula and Japan, but also throughout the world,” Yoon said.

The leaders agreed to hold a trilateral meeting with the US on the sidelines of the upcoming G7 summit in Hiroshima.

US President Joe Biden’s administration has been seeking help from its partners to impose sweeping curbs on the sale of advanced chips equipment to China in a policy aimed at preventing the country’s progression in a range of cutting-edge technologies.

Yoon and Kishida yesterday agreed to cooperate on chips, without elaborating on what the partnership would entail.
 
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