Off the wire
EU, Malawi sign aid program worth over 500 mln euros  • Nineteen Russian tourists injured in lighting strike on Crete island  • Protesting Croatian war veterans clash with police, leaders call for dialogue  • 2nd LD Writethru: U.S. economy shrinks in Q1 on severe weather  • Xinjiang to have 1,500 bilingual judges before 2020  • Kenya says 85 radicalized youth surrender under amnesty offer  • Merkel not ruling out EU treaty changes after talks with Cameron  • China new rules show mercy to "kin concealment" of illegal gains  • Urgent: U.S. officially removes Cuba from list of state sponsors of terrorism  • North-West Africa gets new financial platform from China  
You are here:   Home

China, Japan hope to sign MoU on maritime, aerial crisis liaison mechanism: officials at early date

Xinhua, May 30, 2015 Adjust font size:

Both China and Japan hope to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on the maritime and aerial crisis liaison mechanism and launch the mechanism at an early date, military officials from the two countries said here Friday.

The hope was expressed by Chinese Vice Chief of Staff of the PLA Sun Jianguo and Tokuchi Hideshi, director general of the Japanese Defense Ministry's Defense Policy Bureau when they held a meeting here on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue.

China attaches great importance to the development of Sino- Japan relations and pays high attention to Japan's attitude on historical issues, said Sun, expressing hope that the two sides would continue defense exchanges and cooperation, strengthen mutual understanding, and enhance management and control over contradictions and crisis.

China is willing to work with Japan to promote the good- neighborly relations and cooperation, and earnestly safeguard the hard-won progress in the improvement of bilateral ties on the basis of the four political documents reached between the two countries, said Sun.

For his part, Tokuchi said the Japanese government's stance on historical issues has not changed.

He admitted that there are difficulties and differences in the Sino-Japan relations and Japan is willing to make efforts to improve the bilateral ties.

The two countries' cooperation in the defense and security field would benefit the development of bilateral ties, he added.

Organized by the Britain-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, the Shangri-La Dialogue, widely recognized as Asia-Pacific's foremost defense and security summit, brings together defense ministers, senior officials and security experts to exchange views on key issues that shape the defense and security landscape of the region. Endi