South Korean president-elect's team meets Japan's Kishida
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[April 26, 2022]
By Soo-hyang Choi and Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) - A delegation of foreign
policy aides to South Korea's president-elect met Japanese Prime
Minister Fumio Kishida on Tuesday, officials said, as both of the U.S.
allies aim to mend long-strained ties.
Yoon Suk-yeol, who takes over as South Korea's president on May 10, has
stated his intention to improve relations with Japan that have been
plagued by disputes stemming from Japan's 1910-45 colonisation of the
Korean peninsula, at a time that both face threats from North Korea.
Japan is also keen to develop relations and during the meeting Kishida
said strategic cooperation between Japan, South Korea and the United
States was now more necessary than ever, Japan said.
"There is no time to waste to improve ties between Japan and South
Korea," the Japanese foreign ministry quoted Kishida as saying.
The head of the South Korean delegation, Chung Jin-suk, told reporters
that they agreed with Kishida to work towards forward-looking relations
and for their mutual interests.
The seven-member South Korean delegation arrived in Japan on Sunday for
a five-day visit amid South Korean media speculation that Kishida could
attend Yoon's inauguration.
The last time a Japanese prime minister attended a South Korean
inauguration was in 2008.
Yoon has spoken of the need for leaders of the two countries to
communicate and meet more often but the legacy of Japan's colonial rule
and wartime occupation of Korea could still foil his efforts.
The latest issue to inflame old animosity was a South Korean court
ruling that Japanese companies have to compensate South Koreans forced
to work for Japan during its occupation.
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Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida speaks during a news conference
at the Prime Minister's official residence, in Tokyo, Japan April 8,
2022. Rodrigo Reyes Marin/Pool via REUTERS
In 2018, South Korea's Supreme Court
ordered Mitsubishi Heavy to compensate the victims but the company
has not done so, with Japan arguing the matter was settled under a
1965 treaty.
The issue stirred anger on both sides and threatened to damage their
trade and undermine their security cooperation.
Yoon has referred to the neighbours' poor relations as “the
Achilles’ heel of South Korea-U.S.-Japan cooperation”. He and
Kishida have already agreed to boost three-way ties with the United
States in responding to North Korea.
The United States has long pressed its Asian allies to work together
more closely, and analysts say the rising competition with China and
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have made European countries
increasingly interested in building ties in Asia.
“South Korea and Japan are the pillars in northeast Asia and their
influence radiates well beyond the subregion,” Michael Reiterer,
professor at the Brussels School of Governance and former European
Union ambassador to South Korea, told Reuters.
“I hope the outreach by the president-elect will fall on fertile
ground in Japan – there is need to rebuild trust.”
(Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka, Soo-hyang Choi and Josh Smith;
Additional reporting by Ju-min Park in Tokyo; Editing by Robert
Birsel)
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