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Monday, 31 May 2010 - China's Wen jogs through Tokyo park to woo Japanese |
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    Edition: U.S. Article Comments (0) Slideshow Save Email Print Reprints Most Popular Most Shared UPDATE 2-'Sex' less scintillating at box office 30 May 2010 Israel boards Gaza-bound ships, 15 dead: reports 1:56am EDT White House says BP's new operation to start soon | Video 30 May 2010 France warns on credit rating 30 May 2010 WRAPUP 1-U.S. Gulf Coast warned oil may leak until August 1:01am EDT Euro steadies after worst month since early 2009 | Video 2:46am EDT Bernanke, Trichet see key emerging economies role 30 May 2010 WRAPUP 5-BP, Obama beset by growing Gulf spill frustration 30 May 2010 WRAPUP 4-BP, Obama face clamor to halt oil spill 'crime' 30 May 2010 Study finds iPads cost most in Europe and UK, cheapest in U.S. 30 May 2010 Israel boards Gaza-bound ships, 15 dead: reports 1:56am EDT France warns on credit rating 30 May 2010 Gulf Coast warned oil may leak until August | Video 3:01am EDT WRAPUP 1-U.S. Gulf Coast warned oil may leak until August 1:01am EDT 2,000-calorie milkshake tops list of worst drinks 27 May 2010 Do your colleagues look better on Mondays? 30 May 2010 Tropical Storm Agatha kills 96 in Central America | Video 30 May 2010 Bangladesh blocks Facebook over caricatures 30 May 2010 BP well disaster stuns hardened oil men 27 May 2010 White House says BP's new operation to start soon | Video 30 May 2010 China's Wen jogs through Tokyo park to woo Japanese Chris Buckley and Yoko Nishikawa TOKYO Sun May 30, 2010 10:10pm EDT 1 / 2 Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao greets local residents while jogging in Yoyogi Park in Tokyo May 31, 2010. Credit: Reuters/KYODO TOKYO (Reuters) - Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao went for a jog in Japan's capital on Monday morning on a visit the two nations hope will boost ties that have weakened despite the ambitions of Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama. World  |  Japan The two biggest Asian economies have settled into a steady relationship since 2006, when they set aside years of rancor centered on Japan's wartime occupation of Asia. But their huge and growing bilateral trade, worth $238.7 billion last year, has failed to erase unease over China's military modernization, a territorial dispute over gas fields under the East China Sea and strings of small islands, and Beijing's reluctance to turn on North Korea. Premier Wen took a break from this heavy diplomatic fare on Monday morning to put on a black track suit and jog through leafy Yoyogi Park in Tokyo, in a carefully managed effort to show a softer side of China to the occasionally wary Japanese. Accompanied by panting guards and reporters, he greeted sometimes startled residents who were jogging or walking dogs, and joined some to practice traditional Chinese Taichi exercises. "Do you know who I am?," he asked some of them. They did. "The Chinese people send their greetings," he told others. North Korea is likely to feature in Wen's talks with Hatoyama later on Monday. The Japanese Prime Minister has firmly backed South Korea's contentions that the North torpedoed its naval ship, the Cheonan, in March, killing 46 sailors, and that the United Nations Security Council should censure Pyongyang. China shares long-standing bonds with its communist neighbor North Korea, and Beijing has been determinedly noncommittal about whether Pyongyang was behind the sinking. As a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, China has the power to veto any proposed resolution or statement. Wen instead used a three-way summit with Hatoyama and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak to urge them to calm tensions over the ship sinking and avoid any clashes. "The pressing task now is to respond appropriately to the serious effects of the Cheonan incident, to steadily reduce tensions, and especially to avoid a clash," Wen said at the end of the summit at Seogwipo, a honeymoon resort on the South Korean island of Jeju. Wen's three-day visit to Japan, which began on Sunday, appears unlikely to bring any shift in China's position. But any signs from Wen that his government is distancing itself from North Korea would be a welcome trophy for Hatoyama. For Hatoyama, the visit comes amid domestic gloom, since many voters have grown disenchanted with his government, and may act as a reminder that China could soon displace Japan as the world's second-biggest economy, trailing only the United States. The Japanese premier fired a junior coalition partner from his cabinet on Friday for resisting a U.S.-Japan deal on a Marine airbase, while his Democratic Party is struggling in the polls ahead of an upper house election expected in July. Hatoyama came to office less than a year ago, vowing a more balanced relationship with the United States and closer ties with China and other Asian powers. He also pleased Japan's neighbors by saying he will not visit Tokyo's Yasukuni Shrine, seen as a symbol of Japan's past militarism. But sources of discord remain. China's increasing naval activities in the seas near Japan have made Tokyo nervous. Japanese Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada told his Chinese counterpart, Yang Jiechi, in mid-May that Beijing should commit itself to cut, or at least not increase, the number of its nuclear weapons, prompting an angry rebuttal. The two nations have also been at odds over China's exploration for natural gas in the East China Sea, in areas that Japan says could impinge on gas fields under its maritime jurisdiction. In June 2008, they reached a broad agreement intended to solve the row by jointly developing the fields. Informal talks have recently started, but progress has been slow. Those disputes, however, are likely to remain muffled by economics. China -- already Japan's biggest trading partner -- replaced the United States as Japan's top export destination for the first time in 2009. (Editing by Linda Sieg and Hugh Lawson) World Japan     Add a Comment *We welcome comments that advance the story directly or with relevant tangential information. We try to block comments that use offensive language or appear to be spam and review comments frequently to ensure they meet our standards. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters.   © Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters Editorial Editions: Africa Arabic Argentina Brazil Canada China France Germany India Italy Japan Latin America Mexico Russia Spain United Kingdom United States Reuters Contact Us Advertise With Us Help Journalism Handbook Archive Site Index Video Index   Analyst Research Mobile Newsletters RSS Podcasts Widgets Your View Labs Thomson Reuters Copyright Disclaimer Privacy Professional Products Professional Products Support Financial Products About Thomson Reuters Careers Online Products Acquisitions Monthly Buyouts Venture Capital Journal International Financing Review Project Finance International PEhub.com PE Week FindLaw Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests. NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.

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