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July 4, 2012

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Medvedev visit angers Japanese

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev yesterday landed on a remote island chain seized from Japan by the Soviet Union at the end of World War II, prompting protests from Tokyo which lays claim to the windswept archipelago.

Medvedev's trip to the disputed islands in Russia's Far East - known as the Southern Kuriles in Russia but as the Northern Territories in Japan - saw Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs summon Russia's envoy to complain.

"(This) is a territory inherent to Japan, therefore the visit of this kind is unacceptable for Japan and deeply regrettable," Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs Kenichiro Sasae told Russian Ambassador Yevgenny Afanasiyev in Tokyo.

The islands lie off Russia's eastern coast, some 7,000 kilometers from Moscow, and the island of Kunashir, where Medvedev landed, is a mere 15km from Japan's northern island of Hokkaido. Moscow's plans to boost investment in the region's infrastructure and industry have angered Tokyo.

"The islands of the Kuriles are ... our territory which should develop just like the mainland of our country," Medvedev told reporters in the city of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk before departing by plane to Kunashir. "We have to develop new investment projects, including those with the participation of foreign firms."

He was the first Russian leader to visit the islands during a trip as president in 2010. After that visit, he promised to bolster an artillery division deployed on the islands. Russia has dedicated new funds and political attention to boost Moscow's presence in the country's vast but sparsely populated Far East in advance of an Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Vladivostok in September.

Since Vladimir Putin's return to the presidency this year, it has also created a new ministry of the Far East, whose chief Viktor Ishayev traveled with Medvedev to the island chain.

Soviet soldiers seized the islands at the end of World War II and the territorial row has weighed on diplomatic relations between the countries ever since, precluding a formal peace treaty.





 

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