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China rules out leaders' summit with Japan: state media
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 30, 2013


Beijing has ruled out any imminent leaders' summit with Tokyo, Chinese state-run media said Tuesday after a Japanese official raised the possibility, in a rebuff underscoring tensions over a long-running maritime dispute.

Asia's two largest economies are locked in a bitter row over a string of islands in the resource-rich East China Sea, known as Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan.

Isao Iijima, a close adviser to Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, said on Sunday after a visit to Beijing that a high-level summit "will be held in the not-so-distant future". A day earlier, Abe also said he would like to hold such talks.

But an unnamed official told the China Daily: "What Iijima told reporters on Sunday is not true and is fabricated, based on the needs of Japan's domestic politics."

The official added that Iijima had not met any Chinese government officials, nor did either side discuss a leaders' meeting.

"Beijing (has) ruled out the possibility of an upcoming leaders' summit with Tokyo," the China Daily said.

Foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in an online statement that "as far as I know", Iijima "has not engaged in any official activity in China, nor have officials of the Chinese government made contact with him".

Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida did not directly address the China Daily report at a regular briefing in Tokyo on Tuesday, but said he hoped a visit to China by his deputy this week would pave the way for talks.

"It is important to hold a summit meeting. We hope the visit will lead to such a dialogue," he said.

Diplomatic ties between the two have frayed since last September when Japan nationalised some of the islands, triggering street protests across China.

Tokyo controls the islands, but official Chinese ships regularly patrol the waters nearby -- believed to be potentially rich in petroleum deposits -- raising concerns over a possible confrontation.

The two countries are major trading partners, but have festering disagreements over Japan's imperial past and its invasion and occupation of parts of China.

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Washington (UPI) Jul 24, 2013
The ruling Japanese Liberal Democratic Party's landslide victory in the Upper House elections was effectively a referendum about Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's economic policy to date. With the LDP now controlling both houses of the Diet, and Abe's leadership more secure than ever, the question is how and whether he will be able to move forward beyond the first phase of Abenomics. B ... read more


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