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Japanese ministers anger China, South Korea with war shrine visit
Two Japanese ministers paid respects Monday at a controversial war shrine, infuriating China and South Korea where the site is seen as a symbol of past militarism, especially during World War II.
The Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo honours 2.5 million war dead, mostly Japanese, who perished since the late 19th century -- but it also enshrines convicted war criminals.
Trips to the shrine by government officials have long angered countries that suffered at the hands of the Japanese military before and during the war, particularly South Korea and China.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin reacted angrily to Monday's visits, calling them a "serious provocation".
"China urges Japan to seriously learn from history, cut off militarism, and avoid further losing trust with its Asian neighbours and the international community," he said.
The South Korean government also expressed "deep disappointment" at the visit to the shrine, "which glorifies Japan's past wars of aggression and enshrined war criminals", according to a foreign ministry statement.
Sanae Takaichi, the hawkish minister for economic security, and Kenya Akiba, minister for reconstruction in the disaster-hit northern Tohoku region, offered their respects at the shrine on the 77th anniversary of Japan's WWII surrender.
Takaichi is a regular visitor to Yasukuni and was close to former prime minister Shinzo Abe, whose assassination last month shocked the world.
"This year, there is war in Ukraine. I prayed that no more people will die in wars," Takaichi told reporters, saying she had offered her "gratitude" to the war dead enshrined there.
Trade minister Yasutoshi Nishimura also visited the shrine at the weekend.
But Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, who took office in October, opted to make a traditional cash offering on Monday.
A Japanese prime minister has not appeared at Yasukuni since 2013, when Abe sparked fury in Beijing and Seoul and earned a rare diplomatic rebuke from close ally Washington.
Kishida's office told AFP he gave the offering at his personal expense and "through a proxy, in the capacity of president of the Liberal Democratic Party".
In recent months, Kishida has urged warmer ties with South Korea, saying the two countries "can't afford to waste time" in improving relations, following years of tensions over wartime issues.
Also on Monday, Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako attended a national ceremony to mark the anniversary of the WWII surrender.
M.Fischer--AMWN