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Japan PM seeks to smooth prickly ties with Seoul
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Oct 18, 2011


Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda Tuesday started a visit to South Korea aimed at smoothing prickly relations, bringing with him a set of historic books seized by his country decades ago.

Noda is returning five volumes of Korean royal archives taken out of the country during Japan's 1910-1945 colonisation, Seoul's presidential office said.

The gesture appeared intended to improve the atmosphere for his summit Wednesday with President Lee Myung-Bak, so that it focuses on cooperation rather than thorny territorial and historical disputes.

"We hope (the return) will encourage cultural relations further and lead to a mature relationship," Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura said in Tokyo.

When Noda took office in late August, South Korea urged his government to "look squarely" at the past -- a reference to disputes that have lingered since World War II ended the era of harsh colonial rule.

Relations improved after Japan's tsunami disaster in March, when South Koreans offered aid and sympathy, but worsened this summer when a territorial row over islets in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) flared up again.

The five volumes were to be handed over Wednesday during the summit. By December Japan is to return the remaining 1,200 volumes of archives from Korea's Joseon dynasty, which ruled from 1392 till the Japanese takeover.

Noda and Lee were expected to discuss proposals for a free trade pact, an exchange programme and efforts to restart six-party talks on North Korea's nuclear programme.

Japan, South Korea and the United States say the North must show it is serious about scrapping its atomic arsenal before the long-stalled talks -- which also group China and Russia -- can resume.

While Tokyo and Seoul see eye-to-eye over Pyongyang, they remain at odds over tiny Seoul-controlled islands known as Dokdo in Korea and Takeshima in Japan.

The decades-old sovereignty dispute made the headlines again in June when flag carrier Korean Air mounted a test flight over them.

Tokyo ordered its public servants to boycott Korean Air for a month. Three conservative Japanese lawmakers who planned a trip near the islands to reassert their country's claim were barred from South Korea in August.

The same month, South Korea lodged a strong protest against Japan's 2011 defence white paper, which describes the islands as Japanese territory.

Seoul also complains that its neighbour's school textbooks distort their shared history. And it wants to discuss compensation for Japan's use of Korean women as military sex slaves during World War II.

Dozens of activists protested Tuesday outside the Japanese embassy in Seoul, demanding Tokyo genuinely apologise for atrocities during the colonial era and drop its claim to the islands.

Despite the disputes, some analysts are upbeat about relations.

Park Ihn-Hwi, professor at the graduate school of international studies at Ewha Woman's University in Seoul, said the return of the royal books would improve public sentiment in Korea.

"I don't think relations have deteriorated this year," he told AFP.

"There is a consensus between the two governments that relations should not be strained further by an ongoing territorial row and other disputes such as textbooks."

Park said the two countries would try to step up cooperation in preparation for any regional emergency sparked by North Korea.

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N.Korea, US hold talks on war dead: Pentagon
Bangkok (AFP) Oct 18, 2011 - The United States and North Korea began talks Tuesday on resuming efforts to recover the remains of Americans killed during the 1950-53 Korean War, amid tentative signs of a thaw in relations.

A US delegation met North Korean counterparts in Bangkok for negotiations that were expected to last for two or three days, Major Carie Parker, a spokeswoman for the US Department of Defense, told AFP.

The announcement suggested a slight easing of relations after diplomatic efforts to revive stalled nuclear disarmament talks.

The Pentagon said in a statement that the Bangkok negotiations would only address the issue of recovering remains from the Korean War, in which the United States led a United Nations force fighting alongside South Korea.

The US Department of Defense says more than 7,900 Americans are missing from the conflict, with 5,500 of those believed missing in North Korea.

Joint US-North Korean search teams, in 33 missions in the North from 1996 to 2005, recovered the probable remains of 229 of them.

But cooperation broke down in 2005 when the United States voiced concerns for the safety of its personnel as relations soured over North Korea's nuclear programme.

The US delegation, which will include representatives from US Pacific Command and United Nations Command in Korea, will be led by Robert Newberry, deputy assistant secretary of defense for prisoner of war and missing personnel affairs, the Pentagon said. It was unclear who was representing North Korea.

The talks coincided with a report by South Korea's Yonhap news agency that the North and the United States will hold a second meeting next week in Geneva to discuss how to restart six-nation talks on Pyongyang's nuclear disarmament.

The two sides held a first round of discussions in New York in late July to assess the chances of resuming the negotiations, which also include South Korea, China, Russia and Japan.

The North abandoned the six-party talks in April 2009 and staged its second nuclear test a month later. It now wants an unconditional resumption.

The United States and South Korea say the communist state must first show it is serious about the process, for example by shutting down its uranium enrichment activities, which could be reconfigured to make atomic weapons.

The North has long sought to sign a peace treaty with the United States to formally end the Korean War, which finished with only an armistice.

Washington says the issue should be discussed in the context of the six-party nuclear talks.



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NUKEWARS
N. Korea, US to hold nuclear talks next week: report
Seoul (AFP) Oct 17, 2011
North Korea and the United States will hold a second meeting next week in Geneva to discuss ways to restart stalled six-nation talks on the North's nuclear disarmament, a report said Monday. "I have learned that a high-level dialogue between North Korea and the US will be held in Geneva," Yonhap news agency quoted a diplomatic source as saying, adding the meeting may be on October 26. Th ... read more


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