POLITICS

Japanese PM leaves for Europe for security, trade talks

2017-03-19 15:40 GMT+8
Editor Gong Rong
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe headed Sunday for a four-day trip to Europe, hoping to discuss security issues and make progress on trade as regional tensions soar over accelerating DPRK threats.
Abe's trip, which will take him to Germany, France, Belgium and Italy, comes a few days after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited Tokyo for talks on DPRK nuclear and missile threats. The top US diplomat also traveled to Seoul and Beijing after Tokyo.
Japan has been on edge over DPRK launches since a mid-range ballistic missile flew without warning over the northern part of the country and into the western Pacific in 1998.
The pace of the DPRK's missile development has intensified and its projectiles have since last year been landing ever closer to Japan's coast, with three of the four missiles launched earlier this month falling in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) off Akita prefecture.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe with President of the European Council Donald Tusk (R) and President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker (C) in May 2016. /CFP Photo  
"I want to exchange opinions openly with G7 leaders," Abe told reporters at a Tokyo airport before his departure. "We hope to closely cooperate with the EU on issues the international community is facing such as the problems on DPRK and free trade," he said.
Abe's itinerary includes a visit to technology show CeBIT in Hanover followed by a summit with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and a meeting with French President Francois Hollande in Paris.
Abe will hold talks with European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker and freshly re-elected European Union President Donald Tusk in Brussels as the EU aims to close a free trade deal with Tokyo this year.
The Japanese premier will return to Tokyo on Wednesday after meeting with Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni, chair of this year's Group of Seven industrialised countries.
Abe's visit comes two days after he claimed he would resign if he was investigated in a land-purchase scandal. 
Japanese media have revealed new evidence in a scandal involving Prime Minister Shizo Abe and Moritomo Gakuen, a nationalist school operator in western Japan. Both Abe and his wife are suspected of raising funds for the school operator’s dubious land purchase in mid-February. 
(Source: AFP, CGTN)
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