Japan to recall envoy in dispute with Russia

OSLO – Russia announced yesterday that President Dmitry Medvedev planned more trips to a group of islands seized by the Soviet…

OSLO – Russia announced yesterday that President Dmitry Medvedev planned more trips to a group of islands seized by the Soviet Union from Japan at the end of the second World War, deepening a serious rift with Tokyo.

Japan said it was recalling its ambassador from Moscow temporarily after Mr Medvedev this week became the first Russian leader to visit the desolate islands, known as the Southern Kuriles in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan.

The dispute has added to the pressure on Japanese prime minister Naoto Kan, who is grappling with a divided parliament and is already under fire for what critics say was his mishandling of a separate territorial dispute with China.

The Kremlin has made no comment on the row since Mr Medvedev’s visit on Monday to Kunashir island, but foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said the president planned further trips to the disputed islands.

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“I had a conversation with Russian president Dmitry Medvedev this morning. He expressed satisfaction with his visit to Kunashir and said that he plans to visit the other islands of the Lesser Kuriles,” Mr Lavrov told reporters in Oslo.

The 65-year-old dispute over the islands, which have rich fishing grounds and possibly great mineral wealth, is threatening to overshadow a summit of Asia-Pacific leaders which Japan will host in mid-November.

Mr Kan was still likely to meet Mr Medvedev at the summit, a Japanese government spokesman said. But foreign minister Seiji Maehara said nothing had been decided yet.

“We have a territorial problem and that needs to be solved,” Mr Maehara told a news conference, where he announced the temporary recall of Japan’s ambassador from Moscow.

The dispute with the Kremlin means Japan is now facing difficult relations with its two biggest neighbours. Sino-Japanese relations deteriorated sharply in September after Japan detained a Chinese trawler captain whose vessel collided with Japanese patrol ships near the chain of disputed islands, called Senkaku by the Japanese and Diaoyu in China.

US secretary of state Hillary Clinton, who last week asked both Beijing and Tokyo to be calm and offered to host trilateral talks to bring relations back onto an even keel, said the offer still stood.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu dismissed the proposal as “a US idea”, adding that it was wrong to include the disputed islands in any US-Japan defence agreements.

Critics within Mr Kan’s own party, as well as the opposition, have accused Kan of caving in to Chinese demands by allowing the release of the captain.

That perception has contributed to a fall in his popularity ratings to about 40 per cent after just five months in office.

Japanese economy minister Banri Kaieda expressed concern that the dispute with Moscow could affect commercial relations.

“I’m worried about the impact on economic relations from the Russian president’s visit to the Northern Territories,” Mr Kaieda said after a cabinet meeting. – (Reuters)