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Japan's vice foreign minister to visit Seoul this week

Dec. 28, 2014 - 13:37 By KH디지털2

Japan's vice foreign minister plans to visit Seoul this week to discuss an array of bilateral and regional issues, Seoul's foreign ministry said Sunday.
   
Japanese Vice Foreign Minister Akitaka Saiki will fly to Seoul on Monday for a one-day visit to have talks with his South Korean counterpart, Cho Tae-yong, according to the foreign ministry.
   
The planned meeting comes as bilateral relations have been at their lowest ebb in recent years due to Japan's attempts to deny its wartime atrocities, such as sex slavery and its territorial claims to South Korea's easternmost islets of Dokdo.
  
Cho and Saiki held a strategic dialogue in Tokyo on Oct. 1, the first in nearly two years. At that time, Cho called on Japan to make sincere efforts to address the historical wounds of Tokyo's forceful sexual enslavement of Korean women for future-oriented bilateral ties.
  

Next year marks the 50th anniversary of the normalization of Seoul-Tokyo relations. It also marks the 70th anniversary of Seoul's liberation from Tokyo's colonial rule.
   
South Korean President Park Geun-hye has shunned a summit with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe due to Tokyo's refusal to show sincerity toward the matter of history.
  
Despite the strained bilateral ties, Park made a surprise offer to hold a summit with the leaders of China and Japan during a regional summit in Myanmar in November to keep alive momentum for three-way cooperation.
   
The three countries have pushed to hold foreign ministers' talks to pave the way for the resumption of a trilateral summit, which has been put on hold since May 2012. But no major headway has been made because Japan had been busy with an election until mid-December. (Yonhap)