On the afternoon of August 13, 2001, Vice Foreign
Minister Wang Yi urgently summoned Koreshige Anami, the
Japanese Ambassador to China and made solemn representations
over Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's
visit to the Yasukuni Shrine.
Noting that in disregard of the strong opposition
from Japan's Asian neighbors, including China, and
opposition from inside Japan itself, Koizumi visited the
Shrine that has memorial tablets for class-A war criminals
on August 13, Wang said that the Chinese government and the
Chinese people feel strong indignation over the visit.
Wang said that the Yasukuni Shrine
used to be the spiritual prop of the Japanese military's
invasion of other countries before the Second World War, and
now it still enshrines the memorial tablets to 14 class-A
war criminals. In the first half of the 20th century, it was
the Japanese militarists represented by these class-A war
criminals who launched the wars of aggression bringing
unheard-of calamities to the people of Asian countries and
making the Japanese people suffer a lot as well. When the
war ended, the Far-East International Military Tribunal
brought the Japanese militarists to a righteous trial and
Japan accepted the sentence, promising to pursue a peaceful
development road from then on. As a result, the treatment of
the issue of the Yasukuni Shrine has since become a
touchstone for examining the attitude the Japanese
government holds towards that period of history of
aggression.
Wang stressed that
China was the biggest victim of the Japanese militarism
invasion war. When China and Japan restored the
normalization of diplomatic relations in 1972, Japan clearly
indicated in the Joint Statement that it felt deeply sorry
about the severe harm done to the Chinese people during
World War II and expressed deep introspection. When
President Jiang Zemin visited Japan in 1998, the Japanese
side admitted in earnest again its history of aggression
against China, reiterated its attitude on introspecting and
apologized to the Chinese people, through both the
China-Japan Joint Declaration and official meetings attended
by leaders of both sides. On this basis, the two sides have
reached the significant consensus of "learning from
history and facing the future". However, the Prime
Minister's visit to the Shrine violates the above-mentioned
basic stance of the Japanese government, and again
discredits Japan among the people in Asia and the world,
including Chinese people, on the issue of history.
Wang said that China takes note that
Koizumi gave up his original plan to visit the Shrine on the
sensitive day of August 15 and made remarks on historic
issues, in which he admitted Japanese aggression and
expressed introspection, but his actual practice contradicts
and runs against what he said. It must be pointed out that
what the Japanese leader has done has damaged the political
basis of the Sino-Japanese relations and hurt the feelings
of the Chinese people and people in other victimized Asian
countries, and will inevitably affect the healthy
development of future bilateral ties between China and
Japan.
Wang pointed out that the
negative moves of the Japanese sides towards the issue of
history in recent years, including the latest visit to the
Yasukuni Shrine, have further isolated Japan from its Asian
neighbors and the international community. Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi has repeatedly stated since he came into
office that Japan will strengthen international coordination
and develop friendly relationship with neighboring
countries. But how in the end Japan reflects those
statements in its actual practice is worth pondering by both
the Japanese government and people of insight. The people of
the Asian countries will wait and see on the issue.