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Japan PM travels to South Asia to offset China influence
by Staff Writers
Dhaka (AFP) Sept 06, 2014


China praises South Africa over Dalai Lama visa row
Beijing (AFP) Sept 05, 2014 - China on Friday thanked South Africa and praised its "correct position" for apparently denying a visa to Nobel Peace Prize winner and Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.

An aide to the Dalai Lama said Thursday he had cancelled a trip to South Africa for a Nobel laureates' summit because Pretoria had denied him a visa to avoid angering Beijing.

Previous rejections of the Dalai Lama's visa requests by the African National Congress government have angered South Africans, who see it as a betrayal of the country's commitment to human rights since apartheid ended 20 years ago.

"China highly appreciates the support offered by the South African government on issues concerning China's sovereignty and territorial integrity," foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang said at a regular briefing.

"We also believe that South Africa will continue to uphold this correct position and continue to support China in this regard."

South Africa has produced four Nobel peace laureates -- Albert Luthuli, Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela and FW de Klerk -- and foundations connected to each of them had backed the summit scheduled for Cape Town next month.

The Dalai Lama travelled to South Africa several times after the end of apartheid.

But his aide Nangsa Choedon told AFP that Pretoria had "conveyed by phone to me they will not be able to grant the visa for the reason that it would disturb relations between China and South Africa".

China, which accuses the Dalai Lama of secretly seeking Tibet's independence, regularly deploys its economic and political muscle to pressure governments to limit contact with him.

Beijing is South Africa's biggest single trading partner, with two-way trade worth $21 billion in 2012. Both countries also cooperate in the BRICS grouping of emerging economies along with Brazil, India and Russia.

Qin reiterated Beijing's view of the Dalai Lama.

"The Dalai Lama is a political exile who has long been engaged in activities sabotaging China's sovereignty and integrity under the cloak of religion," he said.

"The Chinese government is firmly opposed to the Dalai's anti-China separatist activities in foreign countries."

Japan's prime minister won Dhaka's support for Tokyo's bid for a non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council as he began a visit to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka aimed at offsetting China's mounting influence in South Asia.

Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said Dhaka would withdraw its candidacy in favour of Tokyo in view of Japan's "continued and strong support in Bangladesh's development process".

Hasina's announcement came after her official summit with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is on a three-day visit to the region to boost economic and security ties.

Dhaka has been campaigning for a Security Council seat for years, but local officials said Japan's commitment to invest in some of the country's key infrastructure projects changed its decision.

Abe is the first Japanese premier to visit Bangladesh in 14 years. On Sunday, he will leave for Sri Lanka on the first trip by a Japanese prime minister in 24 years, where he will meet President Mahinda Rajapakse.

His South Asia tour follows Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's trip to Tokyo earlier in the week during which the two countries, which both have prickly relations with giant neighbour China, declared they would raise ties to a "new level".

Speaking to reporters before leaving Tokyo, Abe called Bangladesh and Sri Lanka "countries with a growing influence in economic and political domains".

In Dhaka, Abe and Hasina signed a joint statement, in which Japan reiterated its support for some of Bangladesh's major infrastructure projects. Dhaka said it would set up an industrial park exclusively for Japanese investors.

- 'Milestone' in relations -

Bangladesh has described Abe's tour as a "milestone" in relations and hoped to win Japanese investment for infrastructure projects including a railway bridge and a tunnel under the Brahmaputra river.

Abe, who is accompanied by dozens of top corporate executives, told a forum of Japanese and Bangladeshi businessmen that ties between the two nations have entered a "new level" and both were "going to help each other like sister and brother".

Abe has said Tokyo would support Dhaka's Bay of Bengal Industrial Growth Belt initiative to spur economic growth in the impoverished nation, but called for "further improvement of investment environment" in the country.

"I express my commitment once again that Japan will extend economic cooperation amounting to about $6 billion for roughly four to five years including about $1.2 billion... which has already been provided," Abe said.

He added that Tokyo was "deeply grateful" for Bangladesh's decision to support its UNSC candidature.

Bangladesh's premier visited Japan in May when Tokyo announced the $6 billion in aid for Dhaka. The deal was a boost to Hasina, coming months after she won a disputed election marred by widespread fraud and an opposition boycott.

Dhaka last month announced Japan would lend about $4 billion for an ambitious coal-fired power-plant project, which includes a deep-sea terminal. Japan is already Bangladesh's largest bilateral donor and is a fast-growing export destination.

Japan's state aid agency has shown interest in building a deep-sea port in Bangladesh's south for which Dhaka earlier approached China.

Bangladesh and Sri Lanka lie along sea-lanes between the Middle East and East Asia. China has helped build ports in countries along the vital route.

In Colombo, Abe and Rajapakse aim to strengthen maritime territorial cooperation in the face of a more territorially assertive China, media reports said.

Japan is ready to provide patrol boats to help Sri Lanka bolster its maritime guard, according to the reports.

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