May 31, 2005
Russia: Foreign Minister Lavrov In Japan To Prepare for Eventual Putin Visit
by Jeremy Bransten
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (file photo)
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Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is in Tokyo on a two-day visit due to lay the groundwork for an expected but as-yet-unscheduled visit to Japan by President Vladimir Putin. But the two countries' six-decade-old dispute over the southern Kurile Islands continues to dog relations. Japanese officials say they expect "substantive talks" on the issue. A resolution, however, seems as unlikely as ever.
Prague, 31 May 2005 (RFE/RL) – President Putin was supposed to be the one visiting Japan this spring, to mark 150 years of trade relations between the two countries.
But the visit has been postponed and Putin remains in Moscow. Instead, Foreign Minister Lavrov finds himself back in Tokyo, with the same vexing issue at the center of bilateral relations: how to resolve the 60-year-old dispute over the southern Kurile Islands – which Japan refers to as its Northern Territories.
Japanese Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura today called it the “one and only remaining obstacle” in relations between the two countries.
The Kurile chain includes 56 islands and lies between Japan's northernmost island of Hokkaido and Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula. The four southernmost islands were occupied by Soviet forces following Japan's wartime defeat in 1945. The islands were formally annexed a year later, a move Tokyo has never recognized and which has prevented the two countries from signing a formal peace treaty and broadening economic relations.