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South Korean President Lee Myung-bak made a surprise visit



South Korean President Lee Myung-bak made a surprise visit Friday to islets at the center of a long-running territorial dispute with Japan, according to a South Korean governor's office, ignoring warnings from Tokyo that it would worsen the neighbors' already strained relations.
Lee made the trip to the rocky, largely uninhabited outcroppings in fish-rich waters with the governor of North Gyeongsang province, according to an official in the governor's office who said the governor called in during the trip. The official spoke anonymously because he said he wasn't authorized to talk to the press.
Before the trip, officials said a visit would make Lee the first South Korean leader to travel to the islets. Seoul officials wouldn't confirm the governor's comments, saying the president hadn't returned to Seoul. Lee also briefly visited nearby Ulleung Island, which is home to a large South Korean population and not part of the territorial dispute.
The visit to the islets—called Dokdo in Korean and Takeshima in Japanese—comes as Lee's conservative party jockeys for votes ahead of hotly contested December presidential elections. Lee, whose popularity has steadily dropped, is in the last year of his five-year presidency and cannot run for re-election.
The trip also comes on the eve of the men's bronze medal Olympic soccer match between Japan and South Korea and days ahead of South Korea's commemoration Wednesday of the peninsula's independence in 1945 from 35 years of Japanese colonial rule.
South Korea stations a small contingent of police officers on the disputed islets in a show of control, but Japan maintains that the rocks are its territory, renewing the claim last month in an annual defense report.
Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba warned before the visit that it would have a "strong impact" on relations and urged Seoul to call it off.
The outcroppings have long been a source of discord, even though the two countries share vibrant trade and tourism ties and are both partners in diplomatic efforts to persuade North Korea to abandon its long-range missile and nuclear arms programs.
Historical and territorial issues, however, plague the relationship. Many people on the Korean Peninsula continue to harbor deep resentment stemming from Tokyo's brutal colonization. South Korea and Japan also remain at odds over what many South Koreans say is Japan's failure to properly address its past actions, including Japan's World War II use of Korean women as sexual slaves for its soldiers.
In late June, Seoul and Tokyo put on hold an intelligence sharing pact seen as a breakthrough in their relations after a political outcry in South Korea.
South Korean activists last year placed a statue of a girl representing victims of Japanese sexual slavery in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul. Japanese officials have apologized in the past, but Tokyo has refused repeated demands from individuals for reparations, saying the matter was solved by international peace treaties.
U.S. State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell expressed hope for good relations between the two key U.S. allies after being asked about reports that Lee was planning to visit the disputed islets.
Last year, Seoul banned three conservative Japanese lawmakers from entering South Korea after they arrived at a Seoul airport with announced plans to travel near the islets.

Posted by BCJP on Friday, August 10, 2012. Filed under , , . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Feel free to leave a response

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