SOCHI (RUSSIA) (AFP) -
Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin on
Friday in the Black Sea resort of Sochi in a bid to bolster ties and
seek to resolve a decades-long territorial dispute.
Tokyo-Moscow
relations have been hamstrung by the row dating back to the end of World
War II when Soviet troops seized the four southernmost islands in the
Pacific Kuril chain, known as the Northern Territories in Japan.
Japan
and Russia's lingering tensions have prevented them ever signing a
peace treaty to formally end World War II hostilities, hindering trade
and investment ties.
"This is a complex, multi-faceted issue that
can only be resolved in a manner acceptable to both sides through an
even deeper partnership between the two countries," Putin's chief
foreign policy advisor Yury Ushakov said ahead of the visit.
Japanese
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said in April that Russia and Japan had
agreed to start negotiations on signing a peace treaty "as soon as
possible" after the meeting.
His Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov
on a visit to Tokyo last month said Russia wants to "move forward" in
relations, but is not prepared to budge on the "result of World War II".
Putin
said during a public phone-in in April that he thinks "a compromise
could be found at some point -- and it will be found" on the territorial
dispute.
Moscow hopes the meeting will help create a
"constructive atmosphere in bilateral relations", but "immediate serious
progress" is unlikely, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov warned.
- Lingering tensions -
Despite
the warmer words from the Kremlin, tensions between the two sides
continue to surface and Japan has hit Russia with sanctions over the
Ukraine crisis.
Russia has in turn angered Japan recently by
building new modern compounds for its troops stationed on two of the
disputed islands.
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev also
infuriated Tokyo by visiting one of the islands, home to some 19,000
Russians, last year.
Putin said last month he welcomed Abe's visit
as it comes despite "pressure from (Japan's) partners, particularly the
United States".
Abe will later this month host a summit of the
Group of Seven advanced industrial countries, from which Russia has been
excluded over its annexation of Crimea.
"Evidently Japan will try
to act as a kind of middleman in the talks process between Russia and
the US," Russia's government newspaper the Rossiiskaya Gazeta said
Thursday.
US President Barack Obama reportedly asking Abe in
February to postpone his trip to Russia, according to sources quoted by
Japan's Kyodo news agency.
Writing in pro-Kremlin daily Izvestia
on Thursday, a former deputy foreign minister and ambassador to Tokyo,
Alexander Panov, suggested the meeting could see "Japan drop a number of
sanctions" it imposed on Russia over Ukraine.
The leaders are
expected to discuss a long-planned visit by Putin to Japan this year,
after Lavrov last month urged Tokyo to give a firm date.
The
Kremlin said they were also set to discuss economic ties, with Moscow
saying their trade turnover last year fell 31 percent due to low oil
prices.
"Japanese business and banks are not in a rush to invest
in the Russian economy, preferring to wait for better times," wrote the
Rossiiskaya Gazeta.
by Anna Malpas
© 2016 AFP
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