DOHA -- Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing on 
Tuesday urged the Japanese government to remove political obstacle to improving 
and developing bilateral ties. 
 
 
   Chinese Foreign 
 Minister Li Zhaoxing attends a meeting with Qatar's First Deputy Minister 
 of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassim Al-Thani during the 5th Asia 
 Cooperation Dialogue Ministerial Meeting in Doha, Qatar May 23, 2006. 
 [Reuters] | 
During a meeting with his Japanese counterpart Taro Aso, Li said that a 
correct understanding and treatment of the unfortunate period of the history 
constitutes an important political basis for restoration and development of 
post-war bilateral ties. 
He stressed that Japanese leaders' insistence on paying homage at the 
Yasukuni Shrine that honors convicted Japanese war criminals severely hurts the 
Chinese people's feeling and harms political basis for bilateral ties. 
"It is imperative to remove such an obstacle to improving and developing 
bilateral ties," Li said. 
The meeting was held on the sidelines of the fifth ministerial meeting of the 
Asia Cooperation Dialogue in the Qatari capital of Doha, which opened on Tuesday 
and will end on Wednesday. 
Li said that the Chinese government has attached great importance to 
developing Sino-Japanese friendship and is ready to promote good-neighborly and 
cooperative ties with Japan based on drawing on lessons from the history and 
looking to the future. 
Recalling that Chinese President Hu Jintao expounded the Chinese government's 
policies on cherishing and developing bilateral relations in a meeting with a 
group of Japanese guests representing seven associations for Japanese-Chinese 
friendship on March 31, Li said that at present, Sino-Japanese political ties 
are facing serious difficulties, which is not in the interests of the peoples of 
the two countries nor in line with aspirations of the international community. 
The Chinese side is willing to work with the Japanese side to bring bilateral 
ties back on track, Li said. 
For his part, Aso said that Japan pays close attention to its ties with China 
and welcomes China's peaceful development and hopes to develop bilateral ties 
based on three political documents guiding bilateral ties. 
On the Taiwan issue, he said that the Japanese government will continue to 
observe the one-China principle. 
He said that the Japanese government mulled President Hu's March 31 remarks 
and hopes that the two sides will grasp real meanings of the remarks to engage 
in more dialogues and exchanges and enhance mutual understanding in order to 
improve and develop bilateral ties. 
During the meeting, the two sides agreed that Sino-Japanese ties are one of 
the most important bilateral relationships for both sides. 
The two ministers also agreed that it is important to strengthen strategic 
dialogue between the two countries and to work together to remove political 
barrier and to deepen economic and trade cooperation and to initiate cooperation 
in the areas of energy saving and environmental protection and to expand shared 
interests. 
They agreed that it is important to promote people-to-people exchanges, 
especially among young people, and to continue to engage in security dialogue at 
deputy ministerial-level and military exchanges.