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June 28, 2006

 The 2nd Annual Tokyo-Beijing Forum in August 2006

June, 28, 2006/07/14 Hibiya Press Center Building

▼Report on the Press Conference/June 28, 2006
▼Japanese panelists at Tokyo-Beijing Forum 2006
▼Chinese panelists at Tokyo-Beijing Forum 2006

Article

The 2nd Annual Tokyo-Beijing Forum in August 2006
“Future of Asia: Towards a renewed relationship between the two nations”
Candid discussions between China and Japan will take place

On June 28th, 2006, a press conference was held by Genron NPO and China Daily newspaper to announce the 2nd Annual Tokyo-Beijing Forum in August. This conference is organized by Genron NPO in conjunction with China Daily newspaper, a prominent newspaper in China, and Beijing University, School of International Study. Followed by the first forum in Beijing last year, we will host this major international event this year from August 3rd through August 5th at Palace Hotel in Tokyo. The theme for this year is “Future of Asia: Towards a renewed relationship between the two nations.” Mr. Yasushi Kudo, managing director of Genron NPO and the main organizer, and five other core organizers spoke the detail of the forum at the press conference.

Spearheaded by Genron NPO, China Daily newspaper and Peking University, School of International Study founded a committee and agreed to hold a forum every year for the next ten years, alternating a host country each year. The plan was made last year while a series of anti-Japanese demonstrations were taking place in Beijing. The committee aims to create an ambit and a communication channel where people in both countries can discuss candidly. Through discussions, the organizers seek to achieve mutual respect and understanding, as the both governments seem to falter on this matter in the past few years. In order to reflect the public views at the forums, public polls are conducted every year in each country, and the results are examined at each forum.

The very first forum in Beijing last year was attended by over 200 participants ranging from government officials, politicians, business leaders, journalists, and scholars in various fields from both countries. The forum caught much attention from the international community, and the reports were made world-wide.

The 2nd Annual Tokyo-Beijing Forum brings five topics to the table:

1.China and Japan within Asia - influx of people, capital investment, cultures, values
2.Responsibility of the two nations - energy, resources, and environmental issues
3.Roles of media - mutual understanding and mutual respect through public awareness
4.Beyond the past – reconciliation to advance with resolutions
5.Future of Asia – contribution of China-Japan relationship

Each topic will be discussed at separate sessions, and each group will present the resolutions to the forum in the end.

The list of panelists from China and Japan were also announced at the press conference (to be updated), and 30 some panelists are expected to engage in candid discussions.

To read the report on the press conference, click here

投稿者 gnpo : 10:43 AM

June 02, 2006

 POINT OF VIEW/Yasushi Kudo

▼ July 28, 2006 Tokyo-Beijing Forum chance to air issues / The International Herald Tribune

▼ June 2, 2006 Editorial/Opinion page  asahi.com / The International Herald Tribune


POINT OF VIEW/Yasushi Kudo

 Only close friends can fight and make up 

Special to The Asahi Shimbun

For Japan-China relations to advance, a new nongovernmental channel of communication is needed that allows citizens of both nations to squarely face the problems facing the countries so they can work toward a solution. A forum for discussion that transcends political prestige and economic interests would be far more effective in tackling the deteriorating ties between Tokyo and Beijing than a government-led exchange program aimed at glossing over the troubled situation with superficial friendship.

This kind of forum was what Japanese nonprofit organization Genron NPO had in mind when it organized a major international conference.“Beijing-Tokyo Forum”.in the Chinese capital last summer in conjunction with the China Daily newspaper and Peking University’s School of International Study.

Scarred by the massive wave of anti-Japanese protests that spread throughout China last year, a number of private exchange programs between the two nations have either been canceled or postponed. Meanwhile, the Asian economy continues to show dynamic growth and economic interdependence between Japan and China is becoming stronger.

But with diplomacy between the two major powers stalled, the apparent emergence of narrow-minded nationalism is a very real concern.

Such thinking endangers Asia’s goals for the future and could even deprive the region of its great potential.

Directly behind this diplomatic standoff is Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, or rather, his visits to Tokyo’s Yasukuni Shrine.

Another contributing factor is the fact that bilateral exchanges and channels of discussion between the two countries are far more feeble and less frequent than those Japan shares with the United States and European nations.

Indeed, Asian diplomacy is shaping up to be a focal point in the Liberal Democratic Party’s presidential election to be held this fall.

Already, various arguments concerning the Yasukuni issue are progressing. But even if the matter is settled, I doubt mutual understanding between Japan and China would show any substantial progress given the fact that bilateral exchanges between the two tend to be closed and limited to only a few groups.

In terms of public awareness, the gap between the two countries remains wider than ever.

Last August’s Beijing-Tokyo Forum was attended by about 200 government officials, politicians, business leaders and journalists from both countries. The contents of the discussion were broadcast and received wide media coverage not only in
Japan and China but around the world.

Most who participated are not experts on Japan-China relations in the traditional sense. They are intellectuals who have a major impact on policymaking and the formation of public opinions in their respective countries. Their backgrounds are varied and they all took part of their own accord.

The forum has two major objectives: One is to develop a new system to advance mutual understanding between Japan and China through discussion. The other is to facilitate discussion aimed at giving rise to constructive action toward the future of Asia. Both objectives are supported by Genron NPO’s will to develop a communication channel that covers the entire Asian region. In that sense, last year’s meeting made significant progress.

Behind the unstable state of relations is the absence of basic understanding and a structural gap in awareness. The problem is that nothing has been done to improve this situation.

In order to reflect public opinion in the forum’s discussions as much as possible, we have agreed to conduct joint public opinion polls in both Japan and China each year.

The results of the first survey released just before the forum showed that most Chinese saw Japan as “militaristic” while most Japanese identified China with “territorial expansionism.”

Instead of simply calling for “Japan-China friendship”.a concept that has been repeatedly stressed in the past. many participants voiced the idea of showing “mutual respect.”

Even people who do not share the same ideas can advance discussion by respecting each other and act together through dialogue.

Instead of protecting our own national interests alone, we should talk matters over frankly revealing our real intention so that we may build a new relationship of trust. Only close

friends can fight and make up with each other again without hard feelings. This agreement was the greatest achievement of the forum’s first meeting. For the next 10 years, the forum will be held alternately in Beijing and Tokyo.


Upcoming Tokyo meet

On August 3-4, it will meet for the second time in Tokyo. We expect more than 30 prominent Chinese intellectuals, including officials who hold key government posts and leaders of media organizations, to visit Japan. They will engage in heated debate with their Japanese counterparts in five groups, each of which will focus on history, natural resources and the environment, media coverage, Asian economic exchange and Asia’s vision for the future.

I insisted on organizing the forum in August because that is when Japan observes the anniversaries of the atomic bombings and the end of World War II. I want the Japanese summer to be viewed as a season when Asia’s future as well as its past can be reflected.

This summer, the Japanese political scene will be in the midst of an election campaign leading up to the LDP presidential election in September. Regardless of the outcome, we are determined to put the results of our discussion into concrete action for the future of Asia.


The author was formerly editor-inchief of the monthly magazine “Ronso” published by Toyo Keizai Inc. In 2001, he became the head of Genron NPO, a nonprofit organization that makes policy proposals through symposiums and other forums. He was born in 1958.

投稿者 gnpo : 01:09 PM