Japan PM arrives in Vietnam on
first overseas trip
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Visiting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (R) and his
Vietnamese counterpart Nguyen Tan Dung smile as they walk toward Dung's
Cabinet Office for official talks in Hanoi on January 16.
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Japanese Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe arrived in Vietnam on Wednesday at the start
of a regional tour aimed at strengthening economic and security ties, his
first overseas trip since winning power.
Abe will spend
less than 24 hours in Vietnam
before heading to Thailand
and Indonesia
in an attempt to bolster relations with the vibrant economies of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations bloc.
He is scheduled to
meet Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and other top officials in Hanoi later Wednesday.
Last year Japan became the largest single foreign
investor in Vietnam,
with major investments in banking, export-orientated manufacturing and
consumer goods as Japanese companies eye the rapidly-expanding middle class.
Japan is also Vietnam's
largest aid donor and political and security ties are growing as Tokyo seeks to shore up regional relationships as a
counterweight to an increasingly confident China.
"Currently,
the strategic environment in the Asia-Pacific region is going through a
dynamic change," Abe, who scored a handsome election win last month
after talking tough on a territorial dispute with China, told reporters
before departing.
"During this
change, having closer relations with ASEAN countries contributes to the region's
peace and stability and is in Japan's
national interest."
Japan and China
are locked in a bitter battle over the sovereignty of the Tokyo-controlled
Senkaku islands, which Beijing
calls the Diaoyus.
Vietnam and China
have competing claims to the Paracel and Spratly Islands,
and regularly trade diplomatic barbs over sovereignty and fishing rights in
the contested waters around the archipelagos.
China is also involved in an acrimonious territorial dispute with
the Philippines over parts
of the East Sea.
ThanhnienNews
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