Friday, March 21, 2014

Japan, South Korea leaders may meet next week

Japan, South Korea leaders may meet next week
( Tokyo ) - East Asia, Japan and South Korea a big problem looms leaders head to Europe next week : They will finally meet ?
 
Friction over South Korea on the first half of 20th century of brutal colonial rule of Japan summit hampered Abe and South Korean President Park Geun-hye
between the Prime Minister of Japan , because they took more than a year ago.
 
Japan is promoting the tripartite meeting with the park and President Obama. All three plan to attend March 24-25 nuclear security summit in the Netherlands.
 
Most Japanese leaders met with their South Korean counterparts in the first year either , so Abe and parks do not, have been worried about the United States.
Both are important allies in the face of China 's military rise and North Korea's nuclear threat . U.S. officials urged the two neighbors to improve
relations , promote healing of historical grievances .
  
A South Korean presidential spokesman told reporters Friday that Seoul would be possible for tripartite talks , in the Netherlands , " will be held " an
announcement soon . South Korean media interpreted Min Kyung- wook 's comments as confirmation that the meeting will be held , but Seoul 's Presidential
Palace and the Foreign Ministry could not immediately confirm this.
  
The meeting seemed almost impossible until Friday last week , when Shinzo Abe said the first time, his government will not consider the country's 1993
amendment to force South Korea to apologize and the other women in the brothels before and during World War II, Japanese soldiers work .
 
South Korea reacted cautiously but positively Abe argument.
Abe had met at the risk of the park, said Robert Dujarric , Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies at Temple University Japan director. Abe and the people
around him in the past expressed a revisionist view of history , and any of them could provoke North Korea repeated again .
  
Japan 's commitment in 1993 to apologize after being questioned last month said it would re-examine the women who said they were forced to provide sexual
conduct interviews accuracy . Basis apology formed part of the interview .
 
Historians say tens of thousands of women as sex slaves , known as " comfort women" in Japan. Some Japanese nationalists have insisted that women are
voluntary prostitutes , and that Japan has been unfairly criticized because they say is a common practice during the war .
  

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