Japanese Emperor Akihito tells visiting Chinese Premier Li Keqiang he hopes for improved ties

Japan's Emperor Akihito speaking with China's Premier Li Keqiang during their meeting at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo on May 10, 2018. PHOTO: AFP

TOKYO - Japan's Emperor Akihito told visiting Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on Thursday (May 10) that he hopes Sino-Japan relations will continue to improve, and be marked by "goodwill and friendship".

His comments, according to the Imperial Household Agency, were in response to Mr Li, who conveyed his hopes that his visit - the first by a Chinese premier in nearly eight years - will be the impetus for a "long-lasting and stable relationship".

Emperor Akihito, who will abdicate the throne on April 30 next year, is known to be well-regarded by Chinese citizens for his active efforts to soothe the wounds of a war fought in the name of his father Hirohito.

He recalled with nostalgia his warm interactions with Chinese citizens during his visit to China with Empress Michiko in October 1992. Mr Li, who had an audience with the Emperor for 20 minutes, said that visit had left an "indelible impression" on Chinese citizens.

The monarch also thanked Mr Li for China's donation of a pair of crested ibises that was pledged on Wednesday. Another two birds had been gifted in 2007.

He said: "Although ibises were once extinct in Japan, I'm glad many are being bred again, thanks to China's help."

Mr Li is the first Chinese premier to meet Emperor Akihito since then premier Wen Jiabao did so in June 2010.

His four-day official visit coincides with the 40th year of a bilateral friendship treaty, and the meeting with the Emperor came a day after he sat down for three-way talks with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and South Korean President Moon Jae In.

Bilateral ties between Japan and China - long marred by history and a bitter territorial dispute over the Senkaku/Diaoyu islands in the East China Sea - have been improving rapidly as their leaders vowed a fresh start.

Japan was initially cool towards China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), an ambitious plan to connect the country with the rest of Asia, Africa and Europe through a series of infrastructure projects. But Mr Abe has since warmed towards the idea and pledged to work together on a "project-by-project basis" - with the caveat that they uphold international norms of transparency and debt sustainability.

The two leaders said on Wednesday after their bilateral meeting that they will launch a new public-private consortium to look into possible projects.

Speaking at a reception to mark the 40th year of the friendship treaty, organised by the influential Japanese business lobby Keidanren, Mr Li said Tokyo's participation in the BRI will serve as an additional boost for the Japanese economy that has been showing signs of modest recovery after years of being mired in a deep funk.

"We will coordinate the BRI with Japan's growth strategy," Mr Li said, referring to Mr Abe's trademark Abenomics mix of economic policies. "Our working-level cooperation will evolve."

Mr Abe said at the same reception: "Our countries have entered an era of partnership from one of competition. We want to promote the concrete development of Asia by private-sector companies."

The two leaders flew to Japan's northernmost Hokkaido prefecture on Thursday afternoon. They are due to attend a meeting of Chinese provincial and Japanese prefectural governors on Friday morning. Mr Li returns to Beijing on Friday afternoon.

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