Japan's FM meets Putin in St. Petersberg

 The seven-decade dispute over the islands' ownership has kept Moscow and Tokyo from signing a post-war peace treaty and hindered trade and investment.

Japan's FM meets Putin in St. Petersberg

World Bulletin / News Desk

The Japanese foreign minister has met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in St. Petersburg and delivered to him a personal message from the Japanese prime minister ahead of Putin's visit to Tokyo later this month.

A disagreement over the southern Kuril islands — which Japan calls the Northern Territories — has prevented the two countries from signing a peace treaty that would have formally ended their World War II hostilities. The Japanese prime minister's two visits to Russia this year however have led many to believe that both sides are moving toward a breakthrough.

Japanese President Shinzo Abe is due to meet Putin on December 15 in the city of Yamaguchi in western Japan with the aim of making progress on the territorial dispute. It will be Putin's first such visit since 2005. 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said "We have an interest in resolving this protracted problem," Lavrov said, while admitting: "it's clear that it's not simple to bring the two sides' positions closer."

"The main area where our positions concur is the clear-cut political striving of our leaders for a mutually acceptable resolution," Lavrov said after talks with his Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida in Moscow.

Kishida said the talks were "meaningful, important and useful" ahead of a visit he called the most important event in the countries' relations this year.

The row dates from the end of World War II when Soviet troops seized the southernmost islands in an archipelago off the northeast coast of Hokkaido just after Japan surrendered.

Russia prompted protests from Japan last month by deploying coastal missile systems to boost its military presence on the islands.

"On the question of the peace treaty, we would like to reach a result that would be welcomed by the people both of Japan and Russia," Kishida said in comments translated into Russian.

He said he wanted "energetic talks" to "finally resolve the sovereignty of the four islands in a mutually acceptable form and conclude a peace treaty."

Lavrov said the diplomats "expressed mutual readiness to try to move forward in resolving practical questions."

He said they agreed "to continue the line that our leaders agreed on the utmost all-round development of our relations in all spheres without exception."

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Güncelleme Tarihi: 03 Aralık 2016, 15:27
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