Wang Yi, member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China and director of the Central Foreign Affairs Office, met with the Japanese Foreign Minister Lin Fangzheng in Indonesia earlier.
According to Reuters Sunday (July 23), the Kyodo Society of Japan quoted a number of unnamed diplomatic sources saying that the proposal was believed to be a signal that the leaders of China, Japan and South Korea were willing to restore negotiations.
The report did not provide details about negotiations.
According to the news released by the official website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday (July 14), Wang Yi met with Lin Fang on the day of Jakarta.
Wang Yi said that 45 years ago, China and Japan concluded a peaceful and friendly treaty, stipulating that China and Japan should adhere to peace, friendship, and cooperation in legal forms, and established a long time and long -lasting new and long -term new and long -lasting.The principles and directions.The two sides should take the 45th anniversary of the approval as an opportunity, learn from history, face the future, practice the original intention, keep the innovation, and work together to build a Sino -Japanese relationship that meets the requirements of the new era.
Wang Yi also said that the current China -Japan relations are in the critical stage of where to go from, and if you do not advance, you will retreat.The Japanese side positioned China as the biggest strategic challenge and rendered China's "threat", which was seriously inconsistent with the reality of Sino -Japanese relations. It also played with the important consensus of "mutual partners and not pushing each other".
He expressed his hope that the Japanese side would establish an objective and rational understanding of China, learn from historical lessons with practical actions, adhere to the path of peaceful development, improve the feelings of the two countries, and promote the return of Sino -Japanese relations to the healthy and stable development track.China is open to the two sides to maintain contact, economic and trade exchanges, and humanistic exchanges.