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403869
Fri, 04/15/2016 - 15:06
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Tokyo and Moscow will continue dialogue on peace treaty - Japanese foreign minister

TOKYO, April 15. /TASS/. Moscow and Tokyo will continue dialogue on signing a peace treaty, and discussion on this matter will take place soon after the planned visit of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to Russia, Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida told a press conference on Friday after talks with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov. "Talking about negotiations on signing a peace treaty which we are holding on the orders of the heads of states of our countries, we agreed to discuss this issue as soon as possible after the visit of our prime minister to Russia," Kishida said. In an interview with Mongolian, Japanese and Chinese media on April 12, Lavrov said that prospects of signing a peace treaty between Russia and Japan should not be reduced to the territorial dispute. The only document signed and ratified by the two sides - Join Declaration of 1956 - says that the sides refused any claims against each other, and that the most urgent task is to sign a peace treaty. Lavrov also noted that Moscow and Tokyo will hold the next round of talks on peace treaty soon. Russia and Japan have no peace treaty signed after World War II. Settlement of the problem inherited by Russia’s diplomacy from the Soviet Union is hampered by the years-long dispute over the four islands of Russia’s Southern Kurils -- Shikotan, Khabomai, Iturup and Kunashir, which Japan calls its northern territories. After World War II, in September 1945, Japan signed the capitulation, and in February 1946, the Kuril Islands were declared territories of the Soviet Union. During the Cold War, Moscow did not recognize the territorial problem, but in October 1993, when Russian president Boris Yeltsin was on an official visit in Japan, the existence of the problem was confirmed officially. However, the two countries have reached no compromise over the dispute yet. Read more

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