Chancellor
Merkel has encouraged Japan to mend post-war ties with its Asian neighbors by
saying Germany had "squarely" dealt with its Nazi past. Merkel is
visiting Japan ahead of her hosting June's G7 summit in Bavaria.
DeutscheWelle, 9 March 2015
Angela
Merkel was received in Tokyo by Emperor Akihito (pictured above) and then Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe on Monday after addressing the two countries' World War Two
militarism during a speech organized by the liberal-leaning Asahi newspaper.
Merkel's
welcome by Abe was shifted indoors because of rain.
Her remarks
precede a statement on Japan's defeat 70 years ago due later this year from
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
Abe's words
are likely to be scrutinized by China and South Korea which in the past have
cast doubt on the sincerity of Japanese atonement. Nationalists in Japan claim
Tokyo has apologized enough.
Abe is expected to make his own comments on the war later this year |
Merkel told
her Tokyo audience that Germany's neighbors in Europe, especially France, had
offered essential gestures of "rapprochement" after 1945.
"This
was possible first because Germany did face its past squarely, but also because
the Allied Powers who controlled Germany after the Second World War would
attach great importance to Germany coming to grips with its past," she
said.
"Germany
was lucky to be accepted in the community of nations after the horrible
experience that the world had to meet with Germany during the period of
National Socialism (Nazism) and the Holocaust," she added.
She
referred to a renowned speech given in 1985 by the late German president,
Richard von Weizsäcker, in which he called the end of WWII in Europe on May 8,
1945 a "day of liberation."
China seeks
'sincerity'
On Sunday,
China's foreign minister Wang Yi said Abe would be welcome at Beijing's
commemorations of the end of WWII, if he was "sincere" about history.
Beijing
regards September 3, 1945, as its day to remember, one day after Japan signed
its surrender to Allied forces on board the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay.
Robotics
and renewables
On a lighter
note, Merkel was "greeted" by the robot Asimo at Tokyo's Miraikan
futures museum with a demonstration of his football kicking ability.
During a
discussion with students and professors, she reiterated Germany's decision in
the wake of Japan's Fukushima disaster almost four years ago to phase out its
nuclear power plants by 2022 and opt for renewable energy sources such as wind
and solar capture.
"For
me, Fukushima was a life-changing experience because Fukushima happened in a
country that has a very high level of technical quality," she said, adding
that for a long period she had supported nuclear power.
Japanese
authorities have authorized the reactivation of four of Japan's 48 idle nuclear
power plants.
Merkel
encouraged her host scientists and students to spend time in Germany, saying
there were numerous possibilities for joint research work involving the world's
third and fourth-largest economies.
Female
poverty highlighted
Merkel
hosts this year's G7 summit of the world's seven major industrial powers in
Bavaria in June. Her visit to Japan is her first since 2008.
On Sunday,
to mark International Women's Day, 36 prominent women, including Beyonce
Knowles and Meryl Streep, submitted a petition to Merkel, calling on her to use
the G7 summit to tackle female poverty.
ipj/msh (dpa, AP, AFP, Reuters)
Angela
Merkel with Shinzo Abe in Tokyo on 9 March. Photograph: Reuters
|
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